& THE MORNING OREGONIAN. THURSDAY, AUGUST 27, 1914. r- " i l LINER SUNK IN FOG; 15 BELIEVED DEAD Steamer Admiral Sampson Is Rammed Near Seattle by Princess Victoria. OIL TANK TAKES FIRE Canadian I'aeirie Craft Keeps Bow in Collision Gap t'ntll All Hope Is Gone 4 Passengers Missed. Many Saved From Sea. SEATTLE. Wash., Aug. 2. Within 10 miles of this port this morning, at 6:30 o'clock, the passenger steamer Admiral Bampson was rammed and sunk by the Princess Victoria, a Cana dian Pacific liner. The collision oc curred in dense fog oft Point No Point. It is believed 15 lives were lost. The official list of dead furnished by the Pacific Alaska Navigation Company contains H names, eight members of the crew, two passengers and an al leged stowaway, but four other pas sengers are missing nnd are believed to have perished. Eight of Crew Lost. The members of the crew lost were; Captain Zimroe M. Moore. Chief Engineer Allen J. Noon. Wireless Operator W. E. liecker. Stewardess Miss M. Campbell . Watchman A. Sater. Third Cook L. Cabanas. Quartermaster C. M. Marqulst. Messboy J. C. Williams. The passengers lost were: Mrs. Kubv Banbury, wife of George Banbury, Paciflc.Alaska Navigation agent at Skagway. George W. Bryant, of Seattle, paint er, bound for Seward. Exra Byrne, of Seattle, a. waiter, who was burned so badly that he died soon after being taken to a hospital here, is believed to have been a stowaway. The four missing passengers are: John McLaughlin, of San Francisco, aid to be well known there. W. Hoffem. J. H. Cllne. William Kloviteh. The Admiral Sampson, bound for Alaska, was just creeping along in the smoke and fog, blowing her horn. The Princess Victoria, also whistling and traveling prudently, struck the Alaska boat at a quarter angle Just abaft the beam and sliced almost three-fourths of the- way across the Sampson. The oil tank of the Sampson was cut Into by the Princess and the oil was set on Art. Immediately the middle of the Sampson and the Interlocking bow of the Princess were enveloped In flame. Many Leap Into Sea. The officers of both boats had good control of their crews. The lifeboats of the Victoria and some of those on the Sampson were Kwered immediate ly, the latter containing passengers. Persons on the Sampson began to leap into the water and were picked up speedily by the Victoria's boats and taken to the Canadian ship. The captain of the Princess held his boat In the gap of the Sampson until the Samps-on began to settle in the water and then withdrew. The Samp son sank a few seconds later. Captain Moore. Quartermaster Mar quist and Wireless Operator Recker staved on the Sampson until they had seen all the others leave. Then they tried to lower a lifeboat, but they were too late and they were ingulfed with the ship. As a result of the collision the Pacific-Alaska Navigation Company filed a libel of J670.000 against the Princess Victoria today. ASHLAND GOES ONTO MAP Exploitation of Mineral Springs Re sources to Be Widespread. ASHLAND. Or., Aug. 26. With the return from San Francisco of the com mittee which has the mineral springs auxiliary to the local water system in cTiarge comes an official report of con tinued progress along construction, ad vertising and exploitation lines. In a general way the committee will adopt features which prevail at the leading European resorts, especially at Carls bad. Government consular agents are making exhaustive reports in regard to conditions there, covering extent and qualities of the waters, hotel facilities and details respecting municipal gov ernment as applied to watering and pleasure resorts, among which Carls bad is conceded to be a model. The most advantageous phases of these will be Incorporated in the plan to place Ashland In the front rank as a watering place. This being accom plished, it is confidently expected that substantial development of other re sources will rouow in aue season, aq vertlslng on a wide scale is planned and to this end the Southern Pacific, through Its various avenues of pub licity, will aid in the work of placing Ashland not only on the state but also the National map. PUMPING PLANTS FIXED Outlook and Grandview Irrigation Districts to Benefit. NORTH YAKIMA, Wash.. Aug. 26. (Special.) Authority was received by the reclamation office here yesterday for Immediate construction of two ad ditional pumping plants, those at Out look and Grandview, besides the pump ing plant at Snipes Mountain. The announcement Included also the information that S50.000 additional had been appropriated for pumping plant construction, making a total of 1340,000 available from the reclamation fund for this purpose. The Grandview and Outlook irriga tion districts have organised and voted bonds, and the work of securing trust deeds to all lands held in excess of 40 acre units Is In progress, in order to comply with the requirement of Secre tary Lane that all farm units under these projects shall be reduced to 40 acres. BOOMS STARTLE COOS BAY (Continued From First Page.) Marshfield with a surveying crew, heard the firing and. being curious, he and his men timed the reverbera tions for 13 minutes. They came almost regularly on the minute and then ceased. The first noise of the reports was sharp and the aftermath was a long, rolling reverberation. Booming Heard Generally. The Marshfield wireless station at 4 o'clock had no word from sea rela tive to a battle. Advices by telephone from Bandon are that the noise was beard at the same hours as on the beach at Coos Bay. The sounds were heard distinctly, but seemed far at sea. Late wvrd from Port Orford last night was that the vessels off Cape Blanco were the German cruisers Leip sig and Neuremburg and a Japanese cruiser. The supposition is the Ger mans were looking for an English mer chant vessel. The trio left the scene late yesterday and nothing was heard of them afterward. Coos River residents who live on high elevations and Mr. and Mrs. Claude Nasburg. of Marshfield, who live on Telegraph Hill, all report hav ing heard the firing at the noon hour. They said they heard the sounds plain ly and that they came from the direc tion of the ocean. Mayor Sure It's Battle. "There is absolutely no question of there having been a battle at sea near Coos Bay." said Mayor Simpson. "The theory of the noise having been thun der cannot be considered, for the firing was at intervals and the battle raged from about 10:30 until 2 o'clock, with one or two pauses. Between 1 and 2 o'clock, following a lull, one tremen dous sound, much louder than had been heard before, was brought to our ears, and then the firing began again with regularity, with an occasional louder explosion. Charles Kaiser, a veteran of the Spanish-American war, was with me. He declared positively the sounds could be nothing else than a naval contest." MR. BOOTH VISITS BOYHOOD SCENES BODY OF MAN, 72, FOUND Note Points to Suicide of Aged In dependence Straggler. INDEPENDENCE, Or., Aug. 26. (Special.) "This deed is done by my Eastern Oregon, Where Candi date Herded Sheep for 25c Daily, Is Seen. PAY TAKEN iN CHICKENS After Taking Little Rest at Eugene Home and Caring for Mail, Which Grows In Volume Daily, Cam paigner Will Begin Tour. EUGENE. Or., Aug. 26. (Special.) Sunburned but radiant in the discov ery that Eastern Oregon, his boyhood home, is behind him to the extent of more than two-thirds of the registered voters in the nine counties through which he toured, R. A. Booth, Repub- STEAMER SUNK IN COLLISION AND VESSEL WHICH STRUCK HER ABOVE ADMIRAL SAMPSON. BELOW PRINCESS VICTORIA. own hands. I am broke and old. I am 72 years old. I was born in 1842. No one cares to give me work, as I am too old. My name will stand unknown. I am glad it is over." Thus reads a note found written in a book lying beside the dead body of an old man discovered beside a bridge inside the city limits here. D. F. Weatherford Is the name on a grip found with the body. A small bottle of carbolic acid and a half-pint bottle containing whisky also were found. The clothing bears the name Frank A. Cram. Hood River. Or. In the grip was found a new automatic revolver, fully loaded. C00LEY ISN0T INDICTED Curry Grand Jury Refuses Bill on Old Murder Charge. ROSEBURG. Or., Aug. 26. (Special.) After an investigation of several days the Curry County grand jury late today refused to return an indictment charging Riley Cooley. of San Fran cisco, with the murder of Thomas Van Pelt, in the- isolated Chetco district of Curry County in 1898. Cooley was ar rested at San Francisco about six months ago, or nearly 18 years after the alleged murder was committed. He was brought to Roseburg and later taken to Gold Beach, where he was re leased on bail in the sum of $50,000. Stephen Doyle, a private detective of Spokane, Wash., worked up the evi dence which resulted in Cooley's arrest. The evidence was presented to the grand Jury by District Attorney Merl deth, of Curry County. PORTLAND IRONWORKER SURVIVES WRECK OF ADMIRAL SAMPSON. : a r J. Broonnu. J. Brosnan, 403 East Forty third street South, Portland, was one of the survivors of the Ad miral Sampson, the Pacific-Alaska Navigation Company steamer which was wrecked 20 miles north of Seattle yesterday morn ing. Mr. Brosnan, a brother of Mrs. F. J. Moran, has been away from Portland several weeks, and had been at Bremerton for a short time before sailing for an out ing in Alaska. He is a skilled structural ironworker and was a foreman on the Northwestern National Bank building, and ex pects to work on the new Meier & Frank building. Mrs. Moran received a tele gram yesterday which read: "Was in Admiral Sampson wreck. Am safe on land now." Mean candidate for United States Sen ator, returned yesterday from a 30 day 2200-mile motor trip, covering all of Eastern Oregon Except the Colum bia River territory. It formed the first gun in his cam paign for the November election and it reverberated through the Eastern Ore gon olateau with accelerating velocity. He was seized first by one county cen tral committee and then another. His trip was a triumphal tour, escorted by loyal Republicans from one county line to another. Brass bands awaited his arrival. He was made the guest of honor wherever he went. He started into Eastern Oregon at The Dalles with no intentions of speaking. It was to be a personal trip to renew acquaintances where he "grew up." For many years he rode the ranges in Wheeler County from the Blue Mountains to the Cascades; he herded and sheared sheep through out the territory that is now Crook, Wiheeler and Grant counties. He point ed out to J. S. Magladry. who accom panied him, the farm on which he worked for 25 cents a day and took his pay in chickens. He traversed the route over which he had driven a band of horses from Umatilla County to Canyon City when he was 14 years of age. Old Times Recalled. He found the acquaintances. He was surprised, he says, to find the number of those who knew him in boyhood. He found men who, as boys, had rid den the ranges with him. It was the host of actual friends which he met that pleased Mr. Booth more than any one thing during the whole trip. Some he had not seen for years. And they in sisted upon speeches. At Silver Lake, a side trip out of Lakeview, they heard of him and sent for him. Returning through Paisley at noon, they surrounded his car and he spoke from the rear of his machine. At Lakeview that night the Court house was filled with waiting Repub licans. "I was never treated better In all my life," he says modestly, referring to the serenades by local bands and of the continual procession, of several cars containing as many as 10 or 12 representatives of the local Repub lican committees, as it moved from one county to another. Much Country Traversed. From Lakeview the party went to Klamath Falls by way of Bly and Bo nanza. A brass band awaited his arrival and It escorted him to the theater, where Judge Benson presided. And thus it went. He passed through Wasco, Sherman, Gilliam. Wheeler, Grant, Harney, Lake, Malheur. Kla math counties and the itinerary took the candidate through The Dalles, Wasco, Shanico, Mitchell, Antelope, Canyon City, Prairie City, Blue Moun tain Springs, Burns, Vale, Ontario, Plush, Adel. Lakeview, Paisley, Silver Lake, Port Rock, Pine Creek, Klamath Falls, Merrill, Fort Klamath and Cra ter Lake. Sometimes they drove 50 miles with out a stop. Occasionally they killed a coyote or sage hen. Mr. Booth is an expert with a rifle. The trip was varied from the Cascades to the Idaho line and from the irrigated lands in the north to the California line and the swamp lands on the south. He says he found Eastern Oregon warmly in accord with his theory that the Democratic free trade policy, bring ing American labor into direct compe tition with the foreigner, is , detri mental to the producer. Eastern Ore gon ranks predominantly in the class of producer. His theme ran along lines of developing the state with the in terest of the producer, the settler, in view. Need of Settlers Noted. "In regions where there were many homesteaders I interviewed the set tlers to learn their needs," said Mr. Booth. "I advocated legislation lead ing to some system of rural credits following the European plan to aid the homesteaders In developing the land. I discussed National legislation necessary to provide for the best means of communication. In the matter of 13 E3 This morning I shall display to the gentlemen of Portland the new Fall styles in men's fine headwear. Your inspection is courteously invited. Dunlap Hats $5 The highest expression of the hatter's skill; soft, stiff, silk and opera. BE. U.S. ,vr. OFFICE StetsonHats$4-$5 Brewer Hats $3 A notable exhibit of three great makes, depicting every proper style for Fall wear. The leading colors are green, brown, blue and black. All combinations of trimmings. Main Floor Ben Selling Morrison at Fourth Exclusive Portland Agent for Dunlap Hat roads and mail service in that section of the country. "I also visited the irrigation projects to ascertain whether or not the settlers are making good, and I viewed the pos sibilities of draining the swamp sec tions of southeastern Oregon. I found, everywhere, complaints from the lack of mail service and from the discon tinuance of mall routes, where the prices of carrying mail have been ad vanced by the addition of the parcels post system, and where the Govern ment has refused to concede to the advances. "In Eastern Oregon I found the reg istration more than two to one Repub lican, and I expect to poll a vote about as It is registered." "Landslide" In Predicted. Mr. Booth's companion, Mr. Magladry, is even more enthusiastic, and char acterizes Eastern Oregon as a "land slide" and far in excess of anticipa tions. Mr. Booth will pass several days going over his mall, and then will leave immediately to report to his headquarters in Portland. H4s next trip will be into Eastern Oregon, this time taking in the counties along the Co lumbia River, and dropping down into Crook County. This trip will be made by rail. At present Mr. Booth is almost snowed under with invitations to speak. "There is a world of them," he says. "Every county fair, every little side show, and every occasion wants one to come and address them. I cannot make them all, but I shall be busy from now until the time of the elec tion." Among those dates under Immediate consideration are Springfield, which soon will celebrate the construction of its new mill; Riddell, Newport, Port land and Heppner. FAIR TRAIN LEAVES Columbia River Interstate Show to Be Promoted. MANY STOPS TO BE MADE Albany Honors Memory ol Pope. ALBANY, Or., Aug. 26. (Special.) A solemn requiem in honor of the late Pope Pius X was held today in St Mary's Roman Catholic Church in this city and was attended by a great many people. Rev. Father Arthur Lane, rec tor of the Albany parish, who con ducted the service, spoke feelingly of the greatness of character of the late Pone and of his work for the church. Vaudeville Artists. Trick Animals, Et Cetera, to Be Taken on Party Making Trip Through Cow litz, Harbor Country. VANCOUVER. Wash.. Aug. 26. (Spe cial.) The special train leaving Van couver tomorrow morning at 7 o'clock to boost for the Columbia River Inter state Fair will contain five cars and arrangements have been made that one of the cars will be turned over to the women who will go on the trip. Among the many interesting things on the train will be taken several comedians, clowns, trick mules, band, singers, several Indians, Beho Graj-, the champion roper of the world, and an air-driven caliope that cost $3500. Letters have been sent to all of the Commercial Clubs in the cities in which the train will stop. Stops will be made at the following places: Ridgefield. Woodland, Kalama. Kelso, Castle Rock, Vader, Wlnlock, Napavine, Centralia. Tenino and Ta coma. where they will put up for the night, parading the streets. Friday, the following stops: Olympia, Oakville, Elma, Montesano, Hoquiam. Aberdeen and back to Vancouver. It Is expected that more than 100 from Vancouver will make the trip. In addition to the performers. Arrangements are being made to have two ferries operating on the 1 o- lumbia during the fair week. Many machines will be brought across the river and the present ferry is inade quate to handle the crowd that cer tainly will be In attendance. There will be enough cars to take the crowds from Portland to Hayden Island, and the Washington-Oregon Corporation In Vancouver will have extra trains mak ing fast time between Vancouver and the fair grounds. PORTLAND INVITED TO J'AIK Vancouver Expects Dig Delegation on Thursday, September 10. Portland is being besought in scores of ways to send representatives to the fair in Vancouver on "Portland lay," Thursday, September 10. Tuesday, J. 1.. Werlein, special representative ol the fair, invited the Rotary Club to send a delegation and yesterday ' Chief Makes Enemy" appeared at the Ad Club and presented to Mayor Albee a Bpeclal In vitation. Saturday the Irwin Wild West Round. Up show will come In force and will make a parade through the streets to interest Portland people In the cele bration of Portland Day at Ml fair. Tho route of their parade, at 4 o'clock, is as follows: Vancouver avenue to Killings worth, east on Killlngsworth to illiams, south on Williams to Oregon treat over Steel bridge, south on Third street to Taylor, west on Taylor to Sixth, north on Sixth to Pine, east on Pine co Fourth, south on Fourth to Moi ,-is.m, over Morrison bridge to Grand avenue, north on Grand avenue to Holla. l:i, west on Holladay to Union. Bor:k on Union to Ainsworth. west on Ainsvorth to Vancouver avenue. Headed by J. E. Werlein, 50 members of the Vancouver Commercial Club and officials of the fair will go by special train Into Southwestern Washington, leaving today, to visit a score of towns to invite them to send people to see the fair. The itinerary of this Whirlwind excursion Is: Thursday Ridgefield. 7:25 A. M. ; Woodland. 7:45 A. M.; Kalama, 8:25 A M.; Kelso, 9:05 A. M.; Castle Rock. 9:55 A. It; Vader. 10:50 A. M.; Wlnlock, 11:20 A. M.: Napavine, 12:05 P. M. : Che- halls, 12:30 P. M.; Centerville, leave e, P. M. ; Tacoma, arrive S P. M. Friday Tacoma. leave 7:30 A. M. : Olympia. 9 A. M. ; Oakville. Bill -V Elma, 12:10 P. M. : Montesano, 1:10 P. M. Hoquiam. 3 V. M. ; Aberdeen. 1:11 P. M. : Aberdeen, leave 7 P. M. BOTTLES AREJJNIQUE CROP Hood Wvor Haiich PrOflMM I'lrM Return. $60. In ;lu--urc. HOOD RIVER. Or.. Aug. 26. (Spe cial.) Perhaps the most unique crop ever harvested In Oregon was I but brought to the city yestcrdsy from the ranch of a young OU who formerly made his home hero, but who now lives in Washington, D. C. The product consisted of a wagon loud of bottles and the return was $60. The place has been owned for a period of more than four years and tho apple trees as yet have never produced nn income. The sale of the bottles, wine, champagne, beer and seltzer, brought the owner the first return he has ever received from his raneh. C0QUILLE MEASURES PASS Cltj Voles lo Double Tax and Im prove Water SjMcni. COWl'ILLE. Or.. An. 20 (Special.) At the special election here today N the questions of amending the charter to permit Die City Council to levy 20-mlll tax Instead of 10. and to laaiK bonds to tho amount of $17,500 for Im proving the water plant, both carried by good majorities. The amendment DM I led Ml 195 and the water works bonds by 2..1 to 173. About 50 per I ent of tho totnl vote was cast. stockman Hurt In RHMMf. DRAIN. Or. Aug. 26. (Special.) T. C Edwards. 60 years old. sustained a broken lee and his ribs crushed yes terday when his team ran away while he was driving to his farm few miles west of town. He was takon to hospital in Roseburg Mr Edward l" a prominent stockman and has resided in Drain for the past 10 year. cas MM brok.- away from jt MlMj m i lie st. LewrenM ami fctfted. fee. Only 30 Days More TO ORDER Carbo n Briquets AT SUMMER PRICES Prices to Advance October 1st ORDER NOW PAY LATER Portland Gas & Coke Company