TTTE MORNING OREGOXIATr, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 33. 1915. PRESIDENT NAMES TRADE COM MISSION Three Democrats Chosen for Federal Body and One -Progressive. ACT OF CONGRESS AWAITED W. H. Parry, of Seattle, Is Picked as ProgresslTe-Hep-ubHcan Some Senators "Wanted Keal Re publican on 1.1st. WASHINGTON. Feb. 22. President Wilson today, live montns aner im enactment of the Federal traae com mission law, sent to the Senate the names of five men nominated to consti tute that commission. Whether the nominations can be confirmed by March 4 was regarded as problematical. The three Democrats named by the President are Joseph K. Davies. of Madison. Wis., now corporation com raissioner. to serve seven years; Ed ward N. Hurley, of Chicago. 111., for six vuni. and William J. Harris, of Cedar- town. Ga, for five years. The other nominees are Will H. Parry, or aeaine. Wash., a Progressive-Republican, named for four years, and George Rubles, of Cornish. N. H, regarded as a Progres sive, for three years. Senator Newlands, chairman of tbe interstate commerce committee to which the nominations were referred, said to night he would call the committee to gether tomorrow, and he thought the confirmation or all tne nomine womu be recommended within a few days. OnDosition to some of the nomina tions, however. Is expected at the White House. Senator Sherman, of Illinois, recently attacked Mr. Hurley as one of the men who "lobbied" in Washington while the tariff bill was pending, and some Republican Senators are said to be dissatisfied because no regular Re publicans were named. The broad purpose of the commission, as provided In the act, is to prevent persons, partnerships or corporations, except banks and common carriers, from using unfair methods of competition in commerce. Whenever the commission has reason to believe that any unfair ' methods of competition is being used, it is authorized to Issue a complaint against the suspected offender and fix a time for a hearing. Individuals or cor porations so cited are given the right to showTrause why an order should not be issued requiring cessation of alleged violations. If such orders eventually are issued and the violations complained of are not stopped, the commission may apply to the Circuit Court of Appeals of the United States for enforcement of its order. Judgment of the court would i be subject to review by the Supreme Court. Mr. Davies, it is understood, will be named chairman of the commission. He was first on the list of nominations sent to the Senate by the President and received the longest term. Because of bis experience in conducting the bu reau of corporations the President is understood to deem him well qualified to head the commission. ' George L. Record, of New Jersey, who was seriously considered by the President for one of the places on the commission, is likely to be made its counsellor, it was said tonight. The position pays the same salary as that provided for members of the commission. 1200 FRUIT JOBBERS MEET Walla Walla Man Is Officer of Western Association. BAN FRANCISCO. Feb. 22. Twelve hundred members of the Western Fruit Jobbers' Association representing more than half the territory of the United I States, held a meeting here today sup plementary to the convention of the organisation which closed last week In Los Angeles. The election of officers, which was the business of the day, had these results: W. H. Crupe. Burlington. Ia.. presi dent; T. D. Turner. Oklahoma City, Okla.. fifst vice-president; A. M. Klein, Los Angeles. Cal., second vice-president: C. A. Kerr. Chicago, third vice president; William L Wagner; Charles G. Trimble. Charles B. Bills. H. M. Weil and H. J. Bellman, directors; William M. Roylance. Provo. Utah, treasurer, and Paul H. Weyrauch, Walla Walla, Wash., sergeant-at-arms. William I Wagner, of Chicago, the retiring president, delivered the clos ing address. STUDENTS WIN IN STRIKE Opinion Holds That Eugene Board Cannot Fix Class Tuition Fees. EUGENE. Or, Feb. 22. (Special.) Three hundred high school students, who "struck" several weeks ago and refused to attend certain classes to which the School Board had fixed a tu ition fee. were sustained today by an opinion of Gebrge M. Brown. Attorney General. He holds that the School Board has no right to charge tuition to any classes. The students at the time appealed to the Lane County District Attorney, who also held that the tax was illegal, but who advised the students to pay under protests and to return to their classes pending the settlement of the contro versy. The, School Board, up to the present time, has ignored the protests of the students. The tax they say represents the wear and tear upon the apparatus, but which, the Attorney-General, in his opinion, holds specifically illegal. The students are now demanding that their fees, be returned them. it is to live within its appropriation of 180.000 the current biennlum. It is probable that it will dispense with the services of several experts and clerks, although no definite decision has been reached. The Commission asked for (100,000, and a member said today that the Legislature would have allowed that sum had the budget comparisons been itemized. For 1913 and 1914 the actual appro priation for the department was $105. 000, although the budget upon which the new appropriation was made showed it to be J70.000. The Legisla ture of 1911 appropriated $36,000 for the public utilities work of the depart ment, but it did not become available until 1913, because of the delay caused by referring the bill, which was approved. It is reported that tne commission has considered asking for the resigna tions of all employes, so in case it Is ELECTION BILLS TO FORE ON CALENDAR Sharpstein Convention Plan Due to Appear Today at Session at Olympia. A"EW ElTGEE POSTMASTER IS .NATIVE OF CITY. VM4JS.s?gOTW(lw,L.umiW-!'IUPJIWUU t ' r - - i ry v -VS. . ? k r 1 : - f - i & - " I r ' f i 'I : t K. L. Campbell. EUGENE. Or.. Feb. 22. (Spe cial.) E. L. Campbell, nominated by President Wilson as postmas ter of Eugene, Is a native of Eu gene and a member of a well known pioneer family. He was born in 1865 within 60 feet of where he now resides. His father was a member of the first con stitutional convention of Oregon. After learning the printing business be entered the United States railway mail service, later becoming editor of the Eugene Daily Guard, which he sold to Charles H. Fisher, now editor of tbe Salem Capital-Journal. He conducted a furniture store for a time and then purchased the Savoy Theater. decided to reduce the force certain ones could be accepted without the necessity of discharging any of the clerks outright- DEMOCRATS ARE VEXED FARMERS tnciON OFFICIAL SAYS WILSO.V IS TOO INSISTENT. Committee Which Called at Washing-. ton to Urge Passage of Callaway Rural Credits Bill Is Heard. BAKER. Or.. Feb. 22. (Special.) nope is being abandoned by many staunch Democrats at Washington of future Democratic success because of President Wilson's insistence that his policies must be carded out. This was the message brought today by A. V. Swift. National vice-president of the Farmers Co-Operative and Educational Union, upon his return from the South and Washington, where he went to ap pear with other Farmers Union execu tives to urge the passage of the Calla way bill for rural credits. The committee appeared before the committees on banks and banking and Mr. switt says he feels that the bill will be the one adopted. The feeling for rural credits Is growing and there was hope when be left Washington of getting It through at the extra ses sion, but now that this has been dis pelled, he says, there is no telling when political wrangling will allow it to come before Congress. Matters were so mixed up at Wash- ngton." said Mr. Swift, "that I do not know when a chance will be given rural credits. I found many people disgusted with tne continual wrangling there and some Democrats say that Wilson's firm stand without allowing others to be heard would keep the party from winning for many years. In the South this feeling is strong. Georgia showed It keenly. Some of the states further north, such as Missouri, were not so determined, but there is some of this sentiment even there." FRENCH GET MORE HORSES Shipment of 30 Carloads Is Made From Idaho Points. CALDWELL, Idaho, Feb. 22. (Spe cial.) Without doubt the largest ship ment of horses made by a single firm left here last night for Jersey City, en route to France. French inspectors for weeks have been assembling the 30 cars of stock Including five cars of heavy draft horses. The tock was assembled at Walla Walla, Baker. Pendleton. Ontario. Spo kane, Boise. Caldwell and other points convenient to the railroad. The local firm rounded up more than 2000 head since November. EMPLOYES ARE IN DANGER State' Railroad Commission to Map Plans Under Lower Appropriation. SALEM; Or. Feb. 22. (Special.) The State Railroad Commission at a meeting tomorrow will determine how LUMBER BOOM IS AWAITED Eastern Oregon Mills and Camps Expect to Open Foil Blast, Soon, BAKER. Or., Feb. 22 (Special.) Eastern Oregon lumbermen generally are optimistic over the prospects for 1915. Orders already are assuring the operation of the different plants to their fullest capactty. Active logging is scheduled to resume in full blast at the upper camps of the Baker White Pine Lumber Company, the Oregon Lumber Company and others about March 15. While a large force has been employed during the Winter cutting the timber Into logs and pre paring for the Spring work, the number will be increasel largely when the crews are put on. FIGHT BEGUN0N MASHERS Baker Police Start Crusade by Deal ing Out 30-Day Sentence. BAKER. Or., Feb. 22. (Special.) "You must tell the truth, and you must not pretend you know women whea you don't," is the Washington's birth day resolution of tbe Baker police, who today started a crusade against mash ers. P. F. Woodward was arrested by Chief of Police Jackson on a charge of accosting and insulting a woman on the street. Police Judge Cunning sen tenced him to 30 days in jail. The ex cuse that he thought he knew the party was used in vain, for the evidence showed conclusively that he undertook to play the part of "masher." STRONGER1 PARTY SCHEME Whitney Measure, Also to Come Up Soon, Requires Pledge From Candidates to Support All Demands of Platform. OLYMPIA. Wash.. Feb. 22. (Special.) When the Legislature resumes its session tomorrow for the 14 working days that remain before adjournment the Senate probably will take up tne Sharpstein election bill, nearly the last of the Republican programme for re vision of the election laws. The Sharpstein bill, emerging from the Senate committee on elections as a. committee measure, provides a partial return to the convention system of nominations, and has drawn the flre of a considerable element of KepuDii cans who are warning legislators not to tamper too much with the direct primary. Any Legal Voter May Kun. While, under this bill, any person now eligible might have his name ap pear on the primary ticket without obtaining the indorsement of a party convention. It would appear in a list with the heading "individual filings. Names of convention nominees would appear above. The nominees of the party conven tions, state and county, under the Sharpstein plan, would be selected Dy plurality vote, and their names would head the list on the primary ballot for each office, with the words "majority candidate" following each name. In case 20 per cent of the members of the convention favored another canai date than the one receiving the con vention nomination, this candidate also would be entitled to have his name appear on the ballot with the designa tion "first minority candidate." Label for Minority Fixed. If a third candidate received 10 per cent of the votes of the convention, his name would appear with the designation "second minority candi date." The names of candidates not indorsed by the convention, would follow with the heading "individual filings." The Whitney bill, passed by the Senate, is intended to provide for stronger party organizations. It au thorizes May primaries to elect dele gates to county conventions, in addi tion to the September primaries for nomination of candidates. The county conventions will elect delegates to state conventions, which will Issue state platforms, to be filed with the Secre tary of State, and in presidential years will elect delegates to National con ventions. Stronger Parties Programme. The Whitney bill also provides for pledging of candidates to support the platform of their respective parties and generally tends toward allowing the strengthening of organizations. From present prospects . probably none of the recommendations of Gov ernor Lister In his message to the Legislature, for revision of the elec tion laws, will be followed. The Governor recommended provision for a preferential presidential primary. for non-partisan election of county and city officers, a blanket ballot plan so that a voter at the primary would not be compelled to call for a party ballot. and elimination of the second . choice provision from the primary laws. ROAD FUXD IS APPORTIONED Clarke and Cowlitz Counties to Get Bulk of $200,000. OLYMPIA, Wash.. Feb. 22. (Special.) At a meeting of the roads and bridges committee today the division of West ern Washington's share . of the $2, 000,000 public highway appropriations to be made for the coming biennlum was tentatively arranged. Under the proposed plan $200,000 will be spent on the Pacific Highway from Toledo south. Most of this amount will go to Cowlitz and Clarke coun ties, the Highway Commissioner being allowed to use bis own discretion in placing the money. Sixty thousand dollars has been al lotted to state road No. 8 along the Columbia River in Skamania County, the same amount" that was appropriat ed two years ago. For the west wing of the Olympic Highway jzoo.uuo nas been allotted to be spent from the Grays Harbor country north or east. For the National l-ark .Highway $200,000 has been allotted, of which $70,000 is to-be spent on the Pacific County end. t The committee will meet tomorrow to go over the figures again and to take up the Eastern Washington ap portionment, which will be a little less than one-third of the total. VETO EVASION WETS PLAN Liquor Forces Demand Referendnm to Escape Governor's Ax. nTVua-DTA -fXTooh FaK 22 (Soe- Ulil .11 1 J " . M "' ".I cial.) Backers of the excise liquor bills, the last nope or me weis oi Washington, believe that in the draft i , i . ; .. enanlnT Aliction measure they have circumvented the veto power - . . i i 1 .... , n oi Governor iisier. wno ia auu n be waiting to disapprove such a meas ure, should it get past the Legislature. . . . . . .jtni. nrAVill, tnv a Bn.Ml AlACttnn. A v I. iw (' .i.. Kill nrnnAeln. renaal of state-wide prohibition, includes In its own last paragrapn it p"""" y CLCICllk.C " 1 ui. . A. ,t,a .tet, nnsl nrnvision II1C3 VfcCI3 V HC ovuww, M tor a special election for this purpose Hovemoer z, uia. The purpose or tnis IS to lane aa antaire of the section of the Wash ington constitution which provides "The veto power of the Governor shall not extend to measures muiaieu "j or referred to the people. will stop that itching If you are suffering with eczema, ringworm, rash or other tormenting skin-eruption, try Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. You will be surprised how quickly the itching stops and the skin becomes dear and healthy again. Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap alio clear away pimples and dandruff. Sold by all dru(-g-ists. Prescribed by doctors for 20 years. For free trial, write to 30-S, Resinol, Baltimore. Pasco Plans Celilo Celebration. PASCO, Wash., Feb. 22. (Special.) The Pasco Chamber of Commerce is making arrangements for a big celebra tion in May to mark the completion of the Celilo locks and the opening of the Columbia river to the sea. A commit tee has been appointed. Pasco Closes District. PASCO. Wash., Feb. 22. (Special.) More strict enforcement of city ordi nances by the police closed down a dis trict of this city Saturday, and the In mates all left town. The district has been tolerated in Pasco for many years. Lane County Court to construct a bridge this year across the north fork of the Siuslaw and for the construc tion of a plank road. These, they say, will complete the highway from Eu- trene to the ocean and connect wnn the highway along the beach. The proposals involve an expenditure of S15.000. The plans to construct a new high school at Florence also have been formulated, they say, and willjae sub mitted at the April election. COURT LIBRARIAN IS ILL Miss Edna M. Hawley-Long TJncon - scions at Home at Salem. SALEM, Or., Feb. 22. (Special.) Miss Edna M. Hawley, Supreme Court librarian, is seriously ill at her home 1S20 Chemeketa street, this city. While conversing with friends this afternoon sh. fainted and late to-rright had not recovered consciousness, although her physicians said her condition was much improved.- Dr. James H. Fairchild was called immediately after she was stricken and he summoned in consultation Drs. A. B. Gilli3 and J. N. Smith. Miss Haw ley Is a native of Vermont and a grad uate of the library school of the Uni versity of Illinois. She has been Su preme Court librarian six years and is recognized as one of the ablest women of the state. STARVING MAN IS RESCUED Sheriff Wilson llnds Man in De serted Douse Is Critically 111. . - - T7.1. 1 QnA- ji-iHAxViN v 1 1 i , ui., x ou, ve nial.) Sheriff Wilson, Deputy Sheriff Miles ana ut. j. y ...... - a hurry call to Parkplace this morning, where it was reported that a dead man had been found, but investigation proved that the man was in a serious condition from exposure. He was in a deserted house. The man. who gave bis name as Oli ver Nees, and said he "was from the North, was laxen w iuo vi i-.w Hospital, where he is recovering. He had been in the deserted house since Friday afternoon, according to a neigh bor. He has had nothing to eat and little to drink since. White Salmon Growers Want Union. iriiiTn kat.moN. Wash.. Feb. 22. (Special.) At a meeting of the new di rectors of the White Salmon Fruit growers' Union Saturday H was decid ed to combine the management of the whita Knimnn union, the Underwood union, and the cannery, to place one manager In charge. 1 I. ...... a Kituttin nf jiiic-Ar ajid water to attract the insects within an Inclosure where they provias rooa ir . capuvc mm. MOUNTAIN WATER SOUGHT Florence Plans for $2000 Gravity System Are Announced. EUGENE. Or.. Feb. 22. (Special.) o r. n n tfvltv nearer svstem is planned by the little town of Florence on the Lane County coast, at the mouth of the siusiaw raver, .tram t . t w Ttortrman. oasnier or tne ins w ' . . - Lane County State and Saving Bank. lfl -rr. H. O Keiiey. ooin oi v jureiiue. l lie uny. i dm..", - - that sufficient bonds can be sold upon satisfactory terms. It proposes to take the water from tne mountains. : miles distant. Mr. Bergman and Mr. O'Kelley are Eugene as delegates to petition the Joyful Anticipation of Motherhood There ts apt to be a latent apprehension 6f distress to mar the complete joy of expectation. But this is quita over come by the advice of so many women to . use "Mother's Friend." This is an external application designed to so lubri cate the muscles and to thus so relieve the .pressure reacting on the nerves, that the natural strain upon the cords and liga ments is not accompanied by those severe pains said to cause nausea, morning 8ict cess and many local distresses. Many people believe that those remedies which, have stood the test of time, that have been put to every trial under the varying conditions of age, weight, general health, etc., may be safely relied upon. And judging by the fact that "Mother's Friend" has been in continual use since our grandmother's earlier years and is known throughout the United States It may be easily inferred that it i3 some thing that women gladly recommend. "Mother's Friend" is prepared only In our own laboratory and is sold by drug gists everywhere. Ask for a bottle to-day and write for a special book for expectant mothers. Address Bradfleld Regulator Co., 803 Lamar Bldg-, Atlanta, Ga. HEADACHE, COLDS, COSTIVE BOWELS TAKECASGARETS Tonight! Clean Your Bowels and End Headaches, Colds, Sour Stomach. Get a 10-cent Box now. You men and women who can't get feeling right who have headache, coated tongue, bad taste and foul breath, dizziness, can't sleep, are bil ious, nervous and upset, bothered with a sick, gassy, disordered stomach, or have a bad cold. ' Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascarets, or merely forcing a passageway every few days with salts, cathartic pills or castor oil? Cascarets work while you sleep; cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested, fermenting food and foul gases; take the excess bile from the liver and carry out of the system all the constipated waste matter and poi son in the bowels. A Cascaret tonight will straighten you out by morning a 10-cent box from any drug store will keep your stomach sweet;. liver and bowels regu lar, and head clear for months. Don't forget the children. - They love Cas carets because they taste good never gripe or sicken. Adv. - THERE'S going to be a lot of plaids worn this mighty smart patterns for young men up here on the second floor. A lot of things you haven't seen be fore because they haven't been made before; they're on display right now come up! $15 to $30 BEN SELLING Morrison at Fourth UQUOR .VOTE TODAY Prohibition Forces in Idaho Senate Fight Amendments. WETS ASK LICENSE REFUND Pressure Being Brought Both For and Against State-Wide Dry Meas ure Already Passed by House. Legislative Session Short. Bt)ISE. Idaho, Feb. 22. (Special.) Interest here among members of the Thirteenth Idaho Legislature is to night centered on the probable out come of the statewide prohibition bill which passed the House of- Repre sentatives and comes before the Sen ate tomorrow afternoon as a special order In committee of the whole. Pro hibition leaders declare they have a compact majority organization and will keep the measure from being seriously amended. The anti-prohibitionists hope to tack on an amendment to refund saloon licenses. For more than a week the antis have kept the bill buried in the Senate. It was averred toniprht they now see defeat for them is Inevitable. Every possible pressure from all parts of Idaho is being brought to bear on Senators for and against the bill. House Session Is Short. Although the House of Representa tives convened as usual this morning. no bills were passed, and after the consideration of half a dozen bills in committee of the whole, adjournment was taken. Twenty-six measures were on the calendar today for final passage, but when that order was reached Johnston, of Bingham, moved that the order be passed, so that Washington's birthday might be ob served by adjourning after a short morning session. The committee of the whole House recommended indefinite postponement of two bills; No. 302, by the committee on education, which requires all con tracts for purchase of school supplies In rural districts to be passed upon by the County School Superintendent, and No. 234. by Bales, repealing all poll taxes. By a. vote of 20 to 21. however, the committee's report on the poll tax bill was adopted, and it continues a precarious lease on life on the general calendar. Senate bill No. 31. by Rock well, creating Butte County, had a somewhat similar experience. The committee recommended that it do not pa.ss, but tho House , proper declined to adopt the report. Senate Visits State Institution. The Senate did not meet. Members spent the day at committee confer ences. The finance committee went to Gooding to Inspect the School for the Deaf, Dumb and Blind to deter mine its needs along the lines of im provements and new buildings. The new Congressional District bill will probably make Its appearance to morrow. It creates the First District from the eight northern counties and Adams, Washington Canyon, Bol.se. Custer and Lemhi Counties, while the Second District is composed of all of the other southwestern, southern and southeastern counties. The voting population is about equally divided In the two districts, together with the census of the state and the assessed valuation. With a few exceptions all the coun ties In the proposed First Congres sional District are In the "rainfall." or semi-arid belt. The counties In the Second District, as proposed by the division, are in the arid or dry belt The division lino rant and weyt run', diagonally across th itato In u south westerly tirectlon. Official I.os Soalcr lles at Astoria. ASTORIA. Or., Feb. 22. (Special. Charles V. Selgler, official loir vralrr for this district, died last lilKht at hii home In this city as the rextilt of a stroke of apoplexy Saturday. Mr. SelB ler was a native of Jackson ville, Or.. 5R yearn nll. nil It'UVfH s wlrtnw. COLDS, HEADACHE, NOSE AND HEAD ALL STUFFED UP 'Tape's Cold Compound" end a cold or grippe in a few houn. Tour cold will brcHk and all rlpi misery end after tutting a dose of Tape's Cold Compound'' every two hours until three doses are taken. It promptly opens cloKCcd-up nostril and air passages In the bead, stops nasty discharge or nose runnins. re lieves kick headache, dullness, tavar Ishness. sore throat, sneezing, soraneaa and stiffness. Don't stay stuffed-upl Quit blowing and snuffllngl Ease your tbrobblna head nothing else In tha world glvra such prompt relief as "rape's CoM Compound," which costs only lit cenla at any drug store, it acts without as sistance, tastes nice, and cauaes no inconvenience. Accftpt no substitute. Adv. Here he a. ' i (golsforlAl. I comes, now! Saturday morning the big sale of "Diamond Brand" Hood River's finest Yellow Newtown Apple opened in Port land! Thousands of families have already bought a box or more. The clubs and restaurants are serving these delicious Newtowns in many ways. Never were such fine apples sold so cheap before. Red Diamond" Hood River Newtown Pippins This perfect-keeping;, big yellow apple is not really known in Portland. Almost the entire crop has been sent abroad, where they commanded from $3 to $5 a box. Because war closed the European market, Hood River is offering her crop of Newtowns to Portland at about cost of production. They're at their best now jusfras the brown is blending with the yellow. On Sale All Over Portland "Red Diamond" Newtowns the Box If your dealer can't supply you, phone Main 9540 and we'll see you get them. Apple Growers' Association, Hood River, Oregon Portland Office, 417 Railway Exchange Building