THE SUNDAY OREGOXIAN, PORTXAITD, OCTOBER 10, 1915. H LISTER TO NAME "FIRST AID" BOARD JLAST OF CALAPOOIAS LIVES AMONG MEMORIES "Old Lize," as She Squats by Her Fire With Sightless Eyes, Mourns for Lost Happiness and 'Wealth" She Once Enjoyed. DRESS-UP WEEK, OCT. 1116 Employers and Employes Will Help Draft Amendment to Workman's Law. t ISSUE IN POLITICS LOOMS 10 leoAnre Proffered by Slate Federa ' tion Opposed on Ground That Alt Internets Should Sle United In Jts Preparation. OLYMP1A, Wash., Oct. 9. (Special.) .Announcement that Governor Lister M ill appoint a commission of employ ers and employes to act with the Industrial Insurance Commission In drafting a "first aid" or medical at tendance amendment to the workmen's compensation act, has raised the ques tion among: Washington politicians as to what part organized labor may be expected to play in regard to Mr. Lis ter's probable candidacy for re-election. Fop the first two years of the Lister administration, the Governor's rela tions with labor leaders were not no ticeably close. In his early years in politics, when he was an iron moulder, Ernest Lister was distinctly a labor man. Later, when he became a contractor snij manufacturer, conditions were naturally reversed. During the 1912 KUbernslorlnl campaign the bulk of the labor support was thrown to Bob Hodge, Progressive nominee. Labor Office First Filled. When Mr. Lister was elected Gover nor, one of the first offices which he took steps to fill was that of Labor Commissioner. The State Federation if I,ebor had a candidate of its own, C. O. Young, of Tacoma. but before the labor men had an opportunity to Tress their choice the Governor ap pointed Edward W. Olson, of Walla Walla. The next question facing the admin istration was whether John H. Wal lace, of the Industrial Insurance Com mission, the only Simon-pure repre sentative of organized labor in the Hay administration, would be retained in office, Wallace held on longer than any other Hay appointee. Two Decline to Serve. Governor Lister expressed his -disapproval of the initiative "first aid" measure drafted by the State Federa tion, on the ground that all interests should be concerted in preparing a measure of the kind. If the measure was defeated he would name a com mission, on which employers as well s employes should be represented, to draft a substitute bill for presentation to the 1915 Legislature. The initiative first-aid bill was de feated by the close margin of 000 votes, and to the Governor's Influence the labor men attributed this loss. So strained was the feeling at this imo that when the executive named his commission, two of the three original labor members. Ernest P. Marsh and Martin J. Flyzik, declined to serve, First-Aid Bill Is Drafted. The Governor's commission drafted a first-aid bill which was in the na ture of a compromise, not wholly satis factory either to the employers or em ployes. When this condition was made apparent in hearings held before the Legislature, the Employers' Associa tion took advantage cf the situation by having; introduced a bill of their own, which constituted practically what the employers had contended for in the commission meetings, before their views were softened by the necessity of compromising with the labor repre sentatives. The programme which Governor Lis ter now intends to carry into effect is to appoint a new commission, to be composed of representatives of em ployers and employes and the Indus trial Insurance Commission, to draft a first-aid measure that may be ex pected to be reasonably satisfactory to 11 parties. TERRITORIAL ACT VALID IDAHO SIPRF.ME COURT DENIES , EXCLUSIVE RANGE TO SHEEP. Ftockmen Declared to Have Same Right and Legislature Power to Regulate I'ae of Land. ' BOISK, Oct. 9. (Special.) The pub. Jic range of Idaho does not belong to the sheepmen but to the United States, and the sheepmen have no more right to it than those conducting the live stock industry. This is. in brief, the decision of the Supreme Court of this state in an issue which has Ions held the stock and sheepmen at swords points over di vision of the range for grazing pur poses. It holds constitutional a territorial ot, known in the revised codes as sec tion S2". which was attacked. An appeal will probably be taken to the Supreme Court of the United States. For years infringements on the leases cf stock and sheepmen have caused war. Sheepmen took their flocks onto the public range which the stockmen Relieved belonged to them. The sheep, thev said, ruined tle range for stock. The territorial act tested makes it unlawful to herd sheep on a cattle range slid determines the right to either range by the rule, of priority. The Supreme Court has this to say 5n holding aauinst invasion of a cattle range oy sheepmen: The range does not belong to the sheepmen but to the Vnited States. The eheepmen have an equal right with all other citUens of the state to the use of this public domain within the Jurisdic tion of the state, subject to the right of the state to control and regulate eurn use. It Is within the constitutional prerogative of the Legislature, In the exercise of the police power of the state, to minimise the opportunities for coninct Between the sheen and cattle Industries to the extent of prohibiting sheepmen from running their sheep on any cattle ranjje. This is not class legislation and it Is not obnoxious to tn provisions of section 1, article 1 of mi state constitution." iV'anipa Sugar Factory Being Rased- NAM PA, Idaho. Oct. . (Soecial.) Erected at a cost of $1,250,000 five years go, the beat sugar factory of the Vteh-ldabo Sugar, Company at this tolace is crumbling into rains under the efforts of 200 wreckers of the Dyer Construction Company. The building is being- rased after three years' un successful effort to operate the factory at a profit. Officers of the company declare that the soil here is unsuitable for tne culture or sugar beets. Virgin. U tb lacinv state in tb pro-1 X .-Jjftt, A -' -.fete eUr x t 1 Is w ' .1 i e i ii i f v . I 1 i - - , ' V55 I t - ' ' " ' . " 1 I If' "r'A- e--a " X-T' J OLD LIZE. 1 .......... ,. .4 MT OLALLA, Or., Oct. S.-(Bpeclal.) A dying people, a vanished race. tribe whose life flame burned hot and high, then flickered and has sunk to one dull ember. Romance is there, say me. Here is a symbol of all life, alike of races and individuals. And yet. when one sees "Old. Lize." the last survivor of the CallaDOoia In dians, squatted on a piece of old car pet by the side of a stone in which she continually keeps a fire to warm her thin blood, it seems a far cry to ro mance. Her hair is white and her bronze face seamed with many wrin kles, but her stout body is upright and her hands small, bony and capable, work nervously and unceasingly with some tangled thread. She cannot un tangle her thread, for her eyes are nearly sightless, only sensing a little of the difference between light and darkness. Mind In Keen and Memory Good. The mind of "Old Lize" is keen and her memory seems good. As to her age, she does not know. You know. People those day.nie poor people. No school, no nothing. I don't know." Of one thing she is sure, however. "I the last. My father gone; my mother gone: my children, all the Callapooia gone." And she waves a long hand and turns her face with sightlesseyes to follow its sweep. I half Uolalla. I know that. My father he Callapooia. He born up this river. He go to MeKenzie and nnd woman there. I born there. My sister, brothers born there. I get man there. Mohawk man. We have three ohildren. My man die then I come back here. I widow then and Callapooia man get ne. I have four more chil dren. Now all gone." Story Told With No Sign of Feeling, "Lize" tells her story clearly, with no sign of feeling, except some bitter ness when she relates how one white man gave whisky to her "big Calla pooia boy" and killed him or caused his death. She mourns over her departed riches and her lost bodily vigor. She tells how she washed and picked hops and got money to buy ponies and get her a house. "I got garden, too, big garden," she repeats. "Lize's" troubles commenced early in life. When she was 10 her parents both died and she was taken by a Molalla woman, while her sister was OREGON PIOXEER OP J845, . FATHER OF 11. IS DEAD. liemvel l.mmai. t5ALEM, Or., Oct. 9. (Special. Lemuel Lcmrnon, who died at his home in Salem September 29, was an Oregon pioneer of 1845. He was born In D"catur County, Indiana. July 4. 1S36. crossing1 the plains by oxteam with his parents when hut 9 years of a?e. Arriving: in the Valley in Oc tober, the family passed the first Winter at Oswepo. In 1867 Mr. Lrmmon married Miss Mary J. Jones. Eleven children were born of this union, ail of whom survive. They are: E. L. Lemmon, A. J, Lemmon and Mary Lemmon, this city; Mrs, W. B. Barnett, Inde pendence; P. N". Lemmon, Grass Valley, On: Mrs. J. A. Adkins, Junction City, Or.: Mrs. P. L. Brown, Silverton; Eunice Lem mon, Grants Pass; X. Lemmon. Antelope, Or.: P. S. Lemmon and P. Lemmon Portland. ; if sent to the Klickitat tribe, both In vir tual slavery. "Lize" tired of her servi tude and ran away, choosing a seaeon when the moon was full. She traveled by night and lay hidden by day. Berries were ripe and plentiful and constituted her sole food, the made her way to the Callapooia, where a friend cared for her. "1A" About IS at WcddlaK. Afterwards she returned to the Me Kenzie, and then she married her Mo hawk man. She was very young, prob--ably not more than 13 years old. Her husband was a cruel man and when full of whisky beat her nearly to death. On one such occasion "Liae" ran away from him and took refuge with Mrs. Spores, at Spores' ferry, who protected her, kept away her Indian husband and taught "Lize" the domestic arts of the white woman, iu which she afterward was proficient. Her husband finally died and she came back again to the Callapooia. Here she married Jim, a Callapooia, who was a bad man. He also was a heavy drinker, and when drunk was dangerous, having the repu tation or Killing two Indians and one white man in tights. For one of thes artairs he was sent to the state peni tentiary. "Old L'.ze" says. ! go down to Government House and stay there ana bother Urover" (Governor at that time) "until he let Jim out." The Callapooias were once a numer ous people, and at the time the whites settled this section were to be found in large numbers at the site of Browns ville and scattered over the vallev of tne uauapooia. reiver and its tributaries. According to old settlers these Indians were always industrious and neaceable and had no trouble with the whites, as- aisiing mem materially tnrough the hard times of the pioneer days. This is also the testimony of "Old Lize," who has been known to the peo ple of this vicinity for many years. Now the tribe is extinct but for her, the sole surviving member, and she is a ward of Benton County and is fed by the charity of the aliens who took the land of her people. Little romance. Indeed, in the sight of "Old Lize" in her faded calico dress, with a bandana handkerchief about her snowy hair, as she aits on her square of carpet and complains of her cough and the "leumatism" she has in cold weather; of the woman who stole her pictures, and the man who gave whisky to her "big boy." Memories Tinged With Romantic. In her memory are the names of many rivers (for so is her geography constructed), musical names, Molalla and Callapooia, and there may be memories also of her early life on the splendid stream of the McKensie. with her Mohawk man and her children, memories tinged with the romantio col ors which we love to think of in con nection with the free, wild life of the Indian. Perhaps so. but "Lize's" spoken thoughts dwell on the time when she was "rich," when she had a big garden and two ponies, and when she could pick four to six boxes of hops In a day. Now: "I no good. My eyes make me bad. I can make no money. Oh, no." Noth ing here of romance, is thereT FAIR TAX LEVY SOUGHT Klamath Districts Pair Xext Want Count j Year. KLAMATH FALLS. Or., Oct. 9 (Spe cial.) The Klamath Commercial Club recently decided that m addition to the three district fairs held each year at Merrill, Bonanza and Port Klamath in this county, they should bo followed by a large county fair held at this point, at which the whole county would participate. The proposition has been talked among ihe business men and ranchers, and today about 30 local men, headed by Judge George T. Baldwin and J. Prank Adams, both members of the County-Fair Board, called upon the County Court to make a tax levy next year of 1 mill to defray the expenses of such a county fair. This plan per mits the use of the state money for the district fairs mentioned. lid i tor Sties for $1000 Paroages. TILLAMOOK. Or.. Oct. 9. (Special.) Frank .Taylor, editor of the Clover- dale CoirVier and Justice of the Peace of the Third Justice district, filed suit in the Circuit Court against A. A. Arstill. a dairyman, of the Nestucca Valley. He alleges that the defendant used unlawful and malicious lanpruage and false and scandalous accusations in the presence of J. M. Traxler and. PhU Messner on October 4 at Clover- aU sUOOQ dftOjaa:. These Merchants Are Official Participants: i - All merchants who dis play in their windows the official dress-up cards, as illustrated, are official participants in Dress-Up Week, Oct. 11 to 16, under the direc tion of the Retail Mer chants' Bureau of the Chamber of Commerce. Portland Chamber of Commerce Retail Merchants' Bureau L. L. Baum Chairman Dress-Up Week LOGAN JUICE UPHELD 0. A. C. Professor Scouts Idea . of Use of Phenomenals. DISTRIBUTION IS STUDIED Comparison of Stock Reveals Dis tinct Marks Of Identity of Fruit Used in Making Drink So Widely Advertised. OREGON AGRICULTURAL. COL LEGE. Corvallis, Oct. 8. (Special.) "Oregon loganberry Juice is made of loganberries and not phenomenal ber ries, notwithstanding the reported statements of Luther Burbank to the contrary," said Professor C. I. Lewis, chief of the Oregon Agricultural Col lege horticultural department, when asked concerning the truth of the re port that loganberry juice is not logan berry juice at all but phenomenal juice under a wrong name. And in this view Professor Lewis is backed up by the men chiefly re sponsible for the introduction and dis tribution of the loganberry in Oregon. "The loganberry is at present wide ly distributed in Western Oregon and In some other parts of the state," con tinued Professor Lewis, "but enough ot the original stock can be traced back to Its introduction to Identify it with the loganberries aa obtained in Cali fornia from Judge Logan, ef Santa Cruz." Pr.of af Identity la Shows. - By comparing this stock the identity of which is accurately known with loganberries in other parts of the state It is clearly shown that the great bulk of the crop as grown in Oregon i loganberries. "The phenomenal berry "has never been widely grown In Oregon. Enough of the fruit has been produced, how ever, to provide plenty of both fruit and vines for comparison w-ith the loganberry, and this comparison has not been favorable to the phenomenal. "Differences in the fruit is much less marked than differences In the vines. It is hard to distinguish the fruits in plate exhibits, but there is no difficulty at all in distinguishing the vines. Attempts to grow the phenomenal berry in Oregon nave demonstrated its inferiority compared with the logan berry and in most cases have been given up. Name Clinnae Plaa I. Mistake, Is View. "It would be a mistake," concluded Professor Lewis, "to permit the change of the name loganberry to phenomenal In growing and marketing the logan berry and its by-products. Besides being an error, it would, greatly les sen the value of the wide and success ful advertising that has been carried on to widen the market for loganberry fruit and ju'ioea. "This advertising campaign has been carried on at considerable expense, and backed by the unsurpassed qualities of the fruit and juiees has made a strong appeal to the popular mind. A change of name would result in con fusion and distrust, and the pioneer work would have to be dona all over again. Loganberries they are. and loaanberriee they should be called." Letters from the Aspinwall Bros., of Brooks. Or., and the Oregon Nursery Company, Orenco, confirm Professor Lewis' contention. APPLE COOKING DATES SET Klamath Falls "Women Will Compete in Contests October 19. t-f.iv ATM V A T.T.K dr.. rv-1 S rSne. clal.) The Civic branch of the Women's Library Club of this city, Mrs. k. t. Wattenberg. president, is planning ap- teber IS, The ro.wr fiX bSft are invited to brinr in samples ot their best fruit, to the best exhibits of which prizes will be awarded. The women will enter in the other contest apples cooked or baked In any form, and prises also will be awarded in this contest. The judg-es ef the apples will be County Agriculturist Oiaisyer and Messrs. W. S. Slougrh and O. A. Stearns. The cooked and prepared applee will be judged by Miss Mears and Miss El mer, domestic science instructors Id the high and public schools, respect ively, and Mrs. E. B. Martin. Aftur the contests, the apples and products will be distributed to the needy by the philanthropic department of the club. SCHOOL FAIR IS BIGGER Department for Adult Added a Pasco Tliis Year. PASCO, Wash., Oct. 9. (Special.) The boys' and grlrU" agricultural and industrial contest for Pasco opened yesterday under the management of the Pasco schools. In addition to the boys' and girls' part, there Is a divi sion of the contest given over this year to exhibits by adults. The affair resembled a 'general county fair and was much larger this year than in any previous year. The manual training and industrial exhibits from the school children were exceptionally good, and were the center of Interest. All kinds of furniture and small designs of handicraft were shown. The department of domestic science had a display 'of sewing, cooking and rancy worn, in addition, canning teams made up of local high school girls gave demonstrations in the art oi canning fruits and vegetable. Senator Jones to Be Guest. ABERDEEN. Wash., Oct. 9. (Spe cial.) United States Senator Wesley L. Jones will be the guest of the Aber deen Young Men's Republican Club on October 28, on which date he will de liver hia "Washington City" illustrated lecture here. Prior to the lecture he will be the guest at a banquet to be given by the olub. One hundred plates will be set at this. HALE HUNDRED FRIENDS HOTVOR. MAW MKAR SAI.KM ON 3D BIRTHDAY Alt- t SIVERSAKV, I a- j ic.. Jtl William Calaer. SALEM, Or., Oct. 9 (Special.) More than SO neighbors of William Calder, who lives about six miles north of ttalera. on the Lincoln road, tendered him a sur prise Wednesday, the occasion being the fid annulvereary of bis Kin h The event was one of utility as I well as pleasure, and an imple- J pient shed, in which every woman present drove a nai.l, was erected. Dinner was served by the host and hostess, who spared no paina for the enjoyment of the guests. Mr. and Mrs. Templeman. ot Newport, also were guests. it vv - - , n ar vyi-i rwirti- --iffii- 7 sft fraSjaFaajSarMtfWM-PWWSSM Lr-i-rTn- , ' : DRESS - it i r J Uncle dam tan Oct, 11 to BUSINESS TALKS BEGUN PRACTICAL MEN GIVE LECTURES AT AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. Credits to Be Glvra Students ta Com merce fee Attendance mni Course Will Last All Winter. OREGON AGRICULTURAL COLLEGE. Corvallis, Oct. 9. (Special.) The school of commerce, under the direction of Dean J. A. Bexwell. has arranged for a course of weekly lectures by busi ness and professional men to extend throughout the year. Many phases of business and professional work will be discussed. College credits will be given students in commerce for at tendance at these lectures, which will be open to the entire student body. Many Portland men will appear before tne students. The first letter in the course was de livered yesterday by Edward R. West, einciency engineer for the Portland Railway. Light & Power Company, who qiscusseo. "Problems In Efficient Busi ness Management" before a larae au dience. Phil Bates, publisher of the Pacific Northwest, Portland, will at an early date apeak on rural credits. The following men have consented to lecture: . C C. Chapman, publisher of the Ore gon Voter. Portland: R. D. C&rnentrr assistant manger. Meier Sc. Frank Com pany, Portland; C. C. Colt, president tnamoer or commerce. Portland: Mar shall N. Dana, of the Oregon Journal; J. K. Gill, president the J. K. Gill Com pany. Portland; Samuel Hill, president Independent Telephone Company; c. Henri Labbe, Vioe-Consul of France and Belgium, Portland; F. A. Free man, vice-president Lumbermen Trust Company. Portland: M. R. Cummlngs, manager Willamette Fuel Company; Frank B. Riley, attorney, Portland: W. F. Woodward, secretary-treasurer of Woodward-Clarke Company, Portland: John P. Van Orsdale, Portland-Lumber Company; R. A. Booth, president Booth Kelly Lumber Company, Eugene; J. O. Holt, manager Eugene Fruit Growers Association; Professor H. B. Miller, University of Oregon, Eugene; W. K. Newell, manager Clover Rjdge Farm, Segbers; Harvey Wells, Insurance Com missioner. Salem; Frank H. Stone, Bab son's Statistical Bureau, Wellesley Hills. Mass.: E. E. Wilson, attorney, Corvallis; B. W. Johnson, ex-postmaster, Corvallis; William Whitfield and W. D. Whitcomb, public account ants. Portland. 28 EX-STUDENTS DINE Teachers and Other Alumni of Vnl-Tersitj- Gather at Ttoseburjr, ROSEBURG, Or.. Oct. . (Special.) Twenty-eight ex-students of the Uni versity of Oregon lunched together here Wednesday. Among those in at tendance were local business men and teachers. Including- several of those at tending the teachers' institute. Earl Kllpatrick, of the University of Oregon, acted as toastmaster. Brief addresses were made by J. W. Hamil ton. Dexter Rice and Dr. George E. Houck, of Roseburg. and Osoar Gorrell. of Oakland. The luncheon was the re sult of a dlseovery that many of the teachers In attendance at the instituto here were ex-students at the univer sity." NOTED CORNETIST ENLISTS Abraham Small Is Assigned to Band at Vancouver Barracks. VANCOUVER BARRACKS. Wash.. Oct. 8. (Special.) Abraham Small, a Russian by birth, and famous through out the United States aa a cornet play er, has enlisted in the United States Army and he has been assigned to the Twenty-first Infantry Band here. He has the rank of chief musician, rank ing next to F. G. Butler, leader'of the band. Mr. Small was for a number of years soloist of the Russian Symphony Or chestra, which, loured the, aountrjc aev. I 90 UP sirs t ' Uffoixl tt. 16 W. E. Conklin Secretary eral times. He has before this time served one enlistment In the Army. School Attendance Is Higher. MONMOUTH. Or., Oct. 9. (Special.) The school census of Monmouth this year shows a large gain over last year and no other year is retforded in which so many pupils from the surrounding country are attending in this city. The High School gain is 30 per cent. More than 200. pupils are in the training school, and the seventh and eighth grades have been moved into the Ore gon Normal School building. GIRLS! LOTS OF L 25c-Cent Bottle of "Danderine Makes Hair Thick, Glossy and Wavy. Removes All Dandruff, Stops Itching Scalp and Fall ing Hair. To be possessed of a bead of heavy, beautiful hair; soft, lustrous, fluffy, wavy and free from dandruff is merely a matter of using a little Danderine. It Is easy and inexpensive to have nice, soft hair and lots of it. Ju.t get a 25-cent bottle of Knowlton's Dander ine now ell drug stores recommend it apply a little as directed and within ten minutes there will be an appear ance of abundance, freshness, fluffiness and an incomparable gloss and luster, and try as you will, you cannot find a trace of dandruff or falling hair: but your real surprise will be after about two weeks' use, when you will see new hair fine and downy at first yes but really new hair sprouting all over your scalp. Danderine Is. we believe, the only sure bair grower, destroyer of dandruff and cure for Itchy scalp, and It never fails to stop fall g hair at once. If you want to prove how pretty and soft your hair really i?, moisten a cloth with a little Danderine and carefully draw it through your hair taking one small strand at a time. Your hair will be soft, glossy and beautiful In Just a few moments a. delightful surprise await everyone who tries tbis,---Aav BEAUTIFU HA R V - - 4 A. f g ii : .!. - . N .; . .. . -. 1 U t i " I I -TT- ,i - - J