PORTLAND, OREGON, MONDAY, MxVRCII Lj Q VOL. XLVI. PRICE FIVE CENTS. 1 DAKOTA IS ASHORE M BAY OF TOKID Big Hill Liner May Be Total Loss. ALU ON BOARD ARE SAVED Passengers and Baggage Are Landed Ship Is Leaking. VESSEL STRUCK A ROCK Portland People Among Those on Board IU-Fated Vessel Full Par ticulars Cannot Be Had Till Return of Rescue Parties. MILL FLOAT SHIP TODAY. SEATTLE, Wash., March 3. Ac cording to advices received bere to night from Yokohama by Alfred Watson, purchasing agent of the Great Northern Steamship Company, the Dakota will be floated tomorrow. Mr. Watson received a cablegram which stated that the ship was about 40 miles from Yokohama In Tokio Bay, unharmed. All of the passen gers were safely landed. The cargo Is Bald to be safe. YOKOHOMA, March 4. The Great Northern steamship Dakota went ashore In the Bay of Tokio last night. All pas sengers are cafe and the agent of the vessel are hopeful of saving her. The Dakota struck on a rock off Shlrahama, a village between Mojlma and Sunosakl, shortly after 6 o'clock Sun day nlg-ht. It is thought that the Suno sakl light was mistaken for the Joga shlma light. The vessel sustained much damage and sprung a heavy leak. - Agents of the steamship, who were sent 10 Omimaru to arrange for the sal vage, are returning this afternoon with passengers and malls and details of the accident. The steamer Dakota is making water freely, and It Is feared that the float ing will be difficult. OX12 OF HILL'S BIG LIXERS Vessel Built in 1905, and Carries Crew of 253 Officers and Men. The steamship Dakota, in command of Captain Francke, sail 3ti from Seattle February 17, with passengers and freight for Yokohama and liongkong. The steamship was built In 1W-5 at New Lon don, Conn., for the Northern Steamship Company, of which James J. Hill is the head. She Is a sister ship of the Minne sota, the largest steamer plying in Pa cific waters. The Dakota carries a crew of 253 officers and men. She is 622 feet long, 73.5 feet beam and 11 feet depth of hold. Her registered gross tonnage is 'Jtt.'M and her net tonnage is 13.316. The DtUtota has an Indicated horseoower of . 10.000. Her navigating bridge is 75 feet above the water. BIG SHIP LEAKIXG BADLY After Hitting Rouk, Stern of Vessel Plunges Into the Water. TOKIO, March 4. Pull particulars of the accident to the steamer Dakota are expected when the vessels sent to her rescue return to Yokohama this evening. Advices at hand indicate that the Dakota struck a rock, lost her balance and that her stern plunged Into the water. She is now in that position and leaking badly. The damage la believed to be serious. The scene of the disaster is in the vicin ity of the Mojlma lighthouse, 40 miles from Yokohama. The day was clear. CONTENTS TODAY'S PAPER The Weather. TESTETtDATS Maximum temperature, 52 1 deirrees; minimum. 33. TODAY'S Fmiri northerly winds. Foreign. Red Line tearaer Varierland Is ashore on Good win- Sands. Page 12. Chip Dakota, ashore in Bay of Tokio; all passengers safe. Page 1. .Deputies to second Russian Parliament ar rive In 6t Petersburg. Page 3. National. cause he can't stand the. expense of pub lic life. Senator Spoon er resigns. Page 1. House passes Philippine bank bill with di vided vote by Democrats. Page 2. fienate talking ship subsidy bill to death. Page 1. Senator Fulton and President agree that Bristol shall hold Federal Attorney's office for time. Page 3. Domestic. Mrs. Eddy, through her attorney, makes pub lic reply to equity suit. Page 3. Big buildings In New York Jarred by ex plosion six miles away. Page 3. 21ai-kln tells of the Germans In America. Page 1. Pacific Coat. Steamer Oakland hits rock ofT entrance to Humboldt Bay. Page 1. Oregon City elopers have headed south. Page 2. Portland and Vicinity. Father O'Hara says men have not stopped going to church. Pag 6. Striking sawmill employes form union and plan big walkout- Page 6. Working carmen decline to Join issues with and it is difficult to determine the cause of the disaster. It is surmised that a strong current was responsible. DOERXBECHERS ARE OX BOARD Portland Man and Party Among the Passengers of Stranded Vessel. F. S. Doernbecher, president of the Doernbecher Furniture Company, accom panied by his wife and daughter, Ada, who live at 771 Tillamook street, were passengers on the Dakota. They left Portland February 15 for Seattle, and caught the Dakota as she sailed on her last trip. The plans of the Doernbecher family were to spend three months in a tour of the Orients In the party also was Mrs. S. B. Forbes, sister of Mrs. F. G. Buffum. Singularly enough, Mrs. Doernbecher spoke to friends on the day before leav ing Portland of her uneasiness and said she felt sure the steamer would go on the rocks. She seemed to have a pre- John C. bpoonrr, of WiaconHin, Who Resigns Seat In senate Because Too Poor to Stand Expense. sentiment that the voyage would be a disastrous one. While this did not deter her from making the trip, friends in the city vouch for the fact that she expressed herself with considerable conviction on the likelihood of a shipwreck.- HITS ROCK OFF t STEAMER OAKLAND ANOTHER VICTIM HUMBOLDT BAR. Vessel Towed Into Bay and Beached in Leaking Condition Unable to Reach Corona. EUREKA, Cal., March 3. Humboldt bar claimed another vlctitm today when the steamer Oakland, In an attempt to reach the . inside entrance, ran on the rocks of the south Jetty. For almost an hour the Oakland remained on the rocks, and the bar tug Ranger was called to her assistance by the lifesaving crew. When the tug reached the Oakland, Captain Krager. of the Oakland, refused aid. A big wave washed the Oakland from her perilous position, but also tore off her rudder. For several hours she drifted helplessly and perilously near the rocks. The lifeboat, commanded by Cap tain Honning. put out. At this time the Oakland displayed dis tress signals and once more the tug Ran ger went to her assistance, towing her this time into the bay, where she was beached in a badly leaking condition. There are several large holes in her stern. The Oakland went on the rocks about 1000 feet from the wrecked Corona. Sev eral attempts have been made to reach the Corona by the Humboldt Bay lifesav ing station, but all were futile. One trip the lifeboat barely escaped destruction on the rocks on the north Jetty. Captain Boyd and a crew of men are aboard the ship making preparations to unload part of the cargo. The Coro'na is in the same position, but has sunk about six feet. Over 500 0 Are Homeless. NAPLES, March 3. The mountain In the Province of Potenza, near Monte murro, which is slipping into the val ley, began again this morning to move, after having remained quiet since Sat urday night. The roaring of the aval anches was heard for a considerable distance. Trees were uprooted and the whole country was devastated. Five thousand persons are homeless and the scene is one of desolation. It is feared that the whole village will be covered over. ' - - - -1- . -m .in..a "SfigtAS;..;;,;.? - . . .v-.;. .... ...... ... .:; . &:-.... .; T ' BIG HILL UXEK DAKOTA ASHORE Ui BAY OF TOKIO. AND WHKH MAY BECOME A TOTAL LOSS. " 4 . mmm . .. ... ....... . . . ... POORER RESIGNS FROM -THE- SENATE Quits Congress toTake Up His Law Work. CANNOT AFFORD PUBLIC LIFE Says Step Just Taken Was De cided When Last Re-elected. SENDS WORD TO GOVERNOR Wisconsin Senator Victim of Era High Living Which Pervades Na tion's Capital Refused Lucra . tive Retainer While in Office. WASHINGTON, March 3. Senator Spooner has" written a letter to Gov ernor . Davidson, of Wisconsin, tender ing his resignation as Senator of the United States, to taTce effect May 1 next. The letter was dated March 2. but the fact that such a letter had been written or that Mr. Spooner con templated resigning did not become known in the Senate until late today, when it created great surprise, and the Wisconsin Senator found himself the subject of many anxious inquiries. To all these he replied that his mind was fully mLde up. He had found, he said, that to continue In his present po sition would require a sacrifice on his part that he could not justify himself in making. In reply to questions he said he would resume the practice of law, but declined to say whether he would be located in Wisconsin. He did say, however, that he would con tinue to be a citizen of that state as long as he lived. Fairbanks Kept the Secret. Vice-President Fairbanks was one of the few public men to be made ac quainted with Mr. Spooner's plans be fore he wrote his letter. The knowl edge came to him through the personal confidence of the Senator, but the lat ter made no oficial communication on the subject to anyone. The law does not require that a resigning Senator should do more than Mr. Spooner has done, but some Senators who have re signed have given notice to the Senate. Senator Spooner in his letter to the Governor says: I hereby resign the office of Senator of the United States from Wisconsin, this res ignation to take effect on the 1st day of May, 1907. Both by law and custom, the foregoing formula suffices, but I cannot bring myself to surrender the trust with which Wisconsin- has so long and so highly honored me by a court sentence which includes no word either of explanation or of gratitude. Had Long Planned to Quit. On the 4 th day of March. I shall have served In all 1 years as a Senator. This Is a long time for one neither willing nor financially able permanently to abandon it, to take from his profession. It has been taken from mine, for I have not thought it compatible with the full and uninterrupted discharge of public duty to pursue it, and I have therefore during my service, with two or three trifling exceptions, purely local, absolutely abstained therefrom. For years, private duty has plainly de manded of me an early return to the prac tice of my profession, and I have never, since I first took the oath of office, wavered In the determination to retire on the expi ration of my present term, March 3, 1909. I might well content myself with a public declaration of my purpose so to retire. If it were not for a like declaration made on a former and similar occasion and what fol lowed It. In the year 19O0. I announced through the press over my signature to the Republicans of Wisconsin that I had un alterably determined to retire from public life at the expiration of the term ending March, 190.1. unless I should deem tt my duty to resign earlier. I Justified the an nouncement upon the ground that the peo ple and those who might aspire to the of fice were entitled reasonably to know from me that I would not accept a re-election. Despite that declaration, circumstances with which the people are familiar seemed to make It my duty to accept a re-election. V'' EVENTS OF COMINa WEEK Begin Roef Trial Tomorrow. The beginning of the trial of the sensational charges against Abraham Ruef, the San Francisco politician and lawyer, is set for Tuesday of this week. The Indictment against Rucf accuses him of extortion. The case against Mayor Schmitz, who recently went Bast to consult with President Roosevelt on the Japanese school question, was continued until Thursday of this week. According to. Judge Dunne, of the Superior ' Court,-tf t-heMayor Is not present In court ''when the . case is called, proceedings which will compel his return will be taken. ' Major Goethals, new chief engineer of the Panama panal, will sail from New York Wednesday and will take charge of the work at the isthmus Immediately upon his arrival. General Booth Is Coming. General Booth, head of the Salva tion Army, will arrive in New York this week on his way to Japan and China. He will spend two weeks In New York and will then proceed to Canada, where he will be the guest of the Governor-GeneraL He will sail for Japan, April 1, from Van couver. About 50 Senators and Representa tives will have Washington March 6 for a tour of inspection of the Panama Canal Zone. A tournament to deride the Na tional amateur billiard champion ship will begin at the German Lle derkranz Club In New York Monday. Ronslan Parliament to Assemble. The Russian Parliament will as ' vemble In St. Petersburg March 5. There will be no speech from the throne. When the officers of the lower house have selected the min isterial programme the flnanc al budget will be introduced, after which the House will be given an opportunity of working out lt own existence. The interest is concen trated In the" budget and the ques tion of a responsible ministry. Adjourn 4 o' Clock Today. ' Congress will adjourn at 4 o'clock today, and both houses will be In ses sion from morning to noon consid ering conference reports and affording the Vice-President and Speaker an opportunity to sign the bills. The ap propriation bills have practically been disposed of, and there will be 'little further legislation of moment. proffered as it was In a manner which made it at once a command and a finer honor than I had ever dreamed would come to me: one, indeed, which ought to satisfy the pride and ambition of any man. A similar declaration by me at this time, however strongly phrased, would, I am persuaded. Map of Bay of Tokio, Showing point Where Steamer Dakota Was Wrecked. prove unavailing to withdraw my name from consideration during the next two years, as did that which I so publicly and unre servedly made in 1900. Not After Further Political Honors. As my purpose to retire from public life Is and has been irrevocable, I am unwilling to be further considered In connection with an office which I could not In the circum stances accept. A Senator will be chosen for the term be ginning on the 4th of March, 1909, and there will be and should be, during the next two years, grave and wide consideration among the people as to the person upon whom the honor shall be bestowed. After much thought, I deem It to be my duty, ail things Considered, to the people of the state and to the party to whose partiality I am Indebted for the highest honors within its gift to take myself now, beyond recall, from the field of possible chance. I am therefore impelled, not only for the reasons suggested, but also that I may be free to devote to the discharge of private duty too long neg lected the remainder of my term, to re sign the office at this time, while the Leg islature Is In session to choose a Senator for the unexpired portion, thereof. I avail myself of this opportunity to say, albeit I am sure it Is not needful, that I am Inexpreesly grateful to the Republicans Concluded on Page 3.) K i " H$ - -HI . .KdhMM' '.t. . . . , , . .... ... . : . . rf JF T ' ? ... A 1 Willi SHIP SUBSIDY IS TALKED TO DEATH Democrats in Senate KeepUpWorktoEnd. BILL PENDING AT MIDNIGHT Sunday Session Enlivened by Humor and Sarcasm. CARMACK, FREYE IN TILT Senator From Maine Rebuked Fel low Members for Unseemly Con duct on Sabbath, and Offends Man From Tennessee. WASHINGTON, March 3. The fili buster against the ship subsidy bill, which began yesterday, was continued throughout the session today and as sumed a humorous vein under the di rection of Senator Carmack, much to the enjoyment of the crowded galle ries. The speakers on the subsidy bill were interrupted frequently to permit the passage of minor bills, the adop tion of conference reports and the transaction of other business inci dental to the closing hours of the sesfon. Ouring the day and the night the conference reports on pension and general deficiency bills were agreed to and there was a long discussion of tbe report of the La Follette railroad employes bill, which was sent back to conference. A report was afterward agreed upon by the conferees, but the report had not been acted upon when at 11:40 the Senate took a re cess until 9:.".0 Monday. The conference report of the sun dry civil bill was agreed to at the last minute, but the ship subsidy bill - had not been acted on. WASHINGTON, March 3. Beginning at 11 o'clock today, by far the largest part of the session of the Senate was devoted to a filibuster by the Demo crat Senators against the ship subsidy bill as it passed the House, and when the Senate adjourned a few minutes before midnight the bill was stilt pend ing. Speeches, intended for no other pur pose than to kill time, were made by Senators Carmack, Dubois, Overman, Newlands and others, who frankly con fessed their intention of defeating con sideration of the amendment to the ob jectionable measure. When the recess was taken at 11:40 the friends of the bill had given up all hope of securing any shipping legislation during the present session. Carmack Injects Some Humor. Never before has the Senate appeared to relish so much an attempt to kill leg islation by filibustering methods. Mr. Car mack, director of the minority movement against the bill, at no time tried to hide the fact that his effort was a filibuster pure and simple. He came into the open by addressing himself principally to the term "filibusters," which Mr. Gallinger only yesterday applied to the Democratic Senators who have undertaken to defeat the measure. Mr. Carmack devoted himself to an in dorsement of Webtser's dictionary as an authority on orthography and definition and 'said If the Senate had any doubt that this work was an authority, he would bring it in and ask that passages from it be read at the desk. After read ing Webster's definition of "filibuster," with its varying uses and synonyms, Mr. Carmack said that the remark of Mr. Gallinger branded him as "a marauder, a pillager, a buccaneer, a sea robber, a free-booter and a pirate upon the seas' In fact, he said. "I have been accused of almost everything except appendicitis. So branded I am to be retired from this body and sent to my home, for I cannot - j v ...... : .'. ia -4 defend myself by attacking the character or the credibility of the Senator from New Hampshire. I cannot discredit him truthfully and therefore cannot discredit him at all." When he had spoken for about 45 min utes, with the obvious purpose of killing tlrne, Mr. Carmack looked at his watch and remarked: 1 Dubois Adds His Mite. "Well, I see I must be parrying along." At this remark the Senators on the floor shouted their amusement. To give Mr. Carmack a rest, Mr. Dubois asked to be permitted to read from a very interest ing document on the subject of ship sub sidy, and Mr. Spooner protested that as Mr. Carmack was in so great a hurry to conclude, it would not be fair to in terrupt him. The Senator, however, said he was sure that any contribution from Dubois would be valuable and he should be glad to permit it to be read and incor porated in the body of his remark,. Mr. Dubois then read at length . and W 4, Y V Mme. Lillian Nordic. Who Liberally Awarded Women Bullfighters at El Paso. when he had concluded a very technical paragraph to which few Senators paid any attention, Mr. Carmack asked fhat the last paragraph be repeated, as he re garded It of great importance. Laughter followed, and as Mr. Dubois sat down, Mr. Gallinger interrupted to reply,- he said, to what he thought had been an unwarranted attack uion him. At this juncture a colloquy occurred between . Mr. Gallinger and Mr. Carmack over the definition of the word -filibuster, as given by different dictionaries, and the latter charged that Mr. Gallinger had simplybeen trying to ''filibuster accord ing to his own definition, of tthe word." By Any Other Name Smells as Bad. Charging that the pending measure was for the purpose. of "looting the treasury," Mr. Carmack referred to the bill as voting a "subvention" and Mr. McLaurin asked the difference between "subsidy" and "subvention." Mr. Carmack answered: . . t "Subsidy by any other name smells as bad." Mr. Carter added to the spirit of levity by interrupting the reading of letters from shipbuilders by Mr. Overman, who was giving Mr. Carmack a respite. "I want to know," said Mr. Carter, "what, if any, dictionary is used in Ten nessee, and that,- if any, standard of spelling exists, and if it Is uniformly ap plied?" This gave Mr. Carmack an opening, which he took advantage of to taunt Senators Carter and Gallinger with be ing parties to a filibuster. "Observing that my question embar rasses the Senator," Interjected Mr.. Car ter, "inasmuch as he , probably Is not willing to admit that the dictionary Is unknown in that state, I will withdraw the Question." "If the Senator wants a direct answer," said Mr. Carmack, "Tennessee stands by the constitution and Webster's diction ary." Tilt Between Frye and McCarmack. After Senator Tillman had asked how much "steal" there was in ship subsidy. Senator Frye of , Maine rebuked the whole proceeding as undignified. For the Senate to hold a session on the Sabbath day, he remarked, for the sole purpose of frivolous debate for the amusement of the galleries was about the most un seemly proceeding he had ever witnessed. While he spoke, Mr. Frye turned so as to face Senator Carmack, who was seated. He at once arose and replied: "If the Senator refers to me, I will say that I am not responsible to blm for my conduct, and I shall conduct myself ao (Concluded on Page 3.) 7 V -J la HNS L Potent Factor in Days of Revolution. MEN AND MONEY FOR CAUSE Were First to Answer Lincoln's Call for Troops. SCHOLARS AND INVENTORS Some of America's Greatest Geninsea Are German or of German Ki tractlon People .Also Promi nent in Politics and Finance. BT FREDERICK J. HASKIN. WASHINGTON, Feb. 26. (Special Cor respondence.) According to the most con- 1 servatlve estimates, there are at least ' 12,000.000 people In America who are either German or of German extraction. We have more than 6.000,000 citizens who were actually born in the Fatherland. They are diffused through every portion of the country, but New , York has the largest German colony in the world. After that the greatest number Is found In Pennsylvania. In the early days of the Keystone State, when the question arose whether the German or English language should be the official tongue of the Legislature, a German cast the de ciding vote in favor of the English. Nine Governors of Pennsylvania have been of German descent. In the West, the num bers pile up again, and there was at one time a concerted effort in Wisconsin to make that wholly a German state. Prob ably 75 per cent of the population of Mil waukee is of German extraction. The history of the Germans In the Uni ted States Is as picturesque as any tra ditions cherished by. the American peo ple. Peter Minnewit, of Wegel, was the first German to set foot on American soil. He came in 162G as first Governor of New Netherlands, but the initial German colony was not established until 16S3, ' In the land of William Penn. This little band of 13 families came on the good ship Concord, with Germar.town as. their Plymouth Rock. The emigration was straggling and Infrequent during the rest of the century, but the accession of good Queen Anne to the throne of England, and her generous protection of the perse cuted Germans, led them In 1703 to leave their desecrated homes for England, from where they were sent to people the Amer ican colonies. Defenders of the Stars and Stripes. Although the Germans themselves d not :boast of their war record, claiming to be a peaceful people, the archives .of American wars show some interesting facts about them as soldiers. The first regiment to reach General Washington after his call to arms was the York County regiment, composed of Germans under Lieutenant Heinrich Miller. More than 40 companies in the war of the Revolution were composed of men of this race, most of them coming from New York and Pennsylvania, but each state where they had settled contributed its share. Colonel Nicolaus Herschheimer, with his brave band of followers, won two decisive victories for the colonies. The far-famed First New York Battalion, under Colonel Lasher, was composed of German soldiery. When in 1776 Washing ton's depleted army of 3000 men called for help before going into the battles of ' Princeton and Trenton, It was 1500 Ger man soldiers who reinforced them and . won those two battles. ; The brilliant, picturesque Baron von Steuben, drill-master and Inspector-general of the army, was called the right hand of Washington because he took a mob and hammered it into an army. When the continental soldiers were starv ing at Valley Forge and a plea was sent forth for funds, nine Germans responded by raising $100,000. The superintendent of bakeries of the continental army was Christopher Ludwlg, who was described by. General Washington as "my honest friend." Michael Hillegas, who was the first treasurer of the United Colonies, and afterward of the United States, was of that nationality. It was Heinrich. Miller who became printer for the con vention, and a German editor "scooped" DING NATION his colleagues on the birth of the United States. Led His Church Flock to Battle. Two stalwart figures of the Revolution were the sons of Henry M. Muhlenberg, the founder of the Lutheran Church In America. The first. Reverend Peter O. Muhlenberg, of Woodstock, Va., called his little flock together one Sunday morn ing, preached a stirring sermon on the. glories of war for the right, then threw aside his clerical coat displaying a mili tary uniform, and called on all those who would to follow him. At the church door he made up a company of 300 men, and with this handful he went through the war, becoming Colonel, then Brigadier-General., and finally Major-General. His statue has been placed in the Na tional hail in Washington by the State of Pennsylvania. His brother, Frederick A. Muhlenberg, was president of the con vention which ratified the Constitution of the United States. Later he was made speaker of the First and Third Con gresses, and it was his deciding vote, in Concluded on Pas 3.) Mrikers for more pay but hope to win Independently. Page 5. L ft