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About La Grande evening observer. (La Grande, Or.) 1904-1959 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 9, 1910)
,L!r;.u :uizi.) ;urr -io ,corniu j.nnui ,:.. FIRST- ANNTJAIrlNDUSTRIAL-EDITION OF TIIE L'A'XjIiAXDE ITONIN(F OBSERVER." Tagc Thirteen IllOI COUNTY IS II LAFJD OF OPPORTUniTIES By W. H. DILWORTH. There 1b dome law that levels hu man life up or down. The banker Is pleased only when he finds a community where good banking Is possible; where there 1b a promise of deposits; where In vest ments are gilt-edged. The mercantile man. the wheat rais er, the fruit man, the stock man, liic man of whatever bent of mind, these all move through a sort of maelstrom of events until they reach their proiifr opportunity. Then each feels the pull of his mission and :h? tcn3ciou3nes3 ofbeing a distinct entity In the shap ing of human events in a locality. This satisfaction can come nrly through opportunity, and opportunity is found only where development lies la the futi-re. Wallowa County -,v. Wallowa cdunty is new in . point xt development. It is the birthplace of opportunity where opportunity , not , only .Jcnotkaoa your chamber dnor, but slips a mencto under the door before you can arN;. It 13 the place for every one, any one, with a healthy de3ire to work, and a strong inclination to be "square. ? In fact this ty residents' preceded ;Hoosevelts fa mous saying by generations. It Is the very place for the man of idas new Ideas. In Wallowa countyU too, new Ideas seem to be born of the sublime surroundings, the excellent climate, the rich, ; fertile Jvalleys and f bench lands, the magnificent mountain scenery, the thousands upon thous ands of acres of splendid forests, the clear streams of water, the unnum bered springs, and the general physi cal supremacy of the whole country. Here a brand new , idea never went begging. And here no man can linger without generating soma new Ideas. It Is remembered by Captain Smith climates, within the same county; melons and squashes, cucumbers and pumpkins, down in the bench lands of the Imnaha. In fact, the settler can tind almost any climate , he desires right in Wallowa county from a hot CaLornla climate to the cool mountain climate of Enterprise. The early Indians took advantage of this great change In climatic con ditions in the couny. They retired to the warm or lower district la winter, where -forage for their ponies grew during the winter, and in summer they returned to the higher altitudes ana fished and pursued the chase where the cool mountain breezes pre vented oppressive weather in the hot season. Aside from the Imnaha district 'rrny-distr.tts in the north part of the county are very favorable to fruit itid melon cul;ure. The Grouse coun 'n. thg country . about Flora, Para dise, Promise and about Troy,' on or near the Grand Rounde river, all will be. round, excellent ..fruit sections.. The , country is broken, and the higher lands are devoted to wheat raising and range lands, while the richer .cuth UaJs, ns.ng u from the water f curses, are devoted ti fruit and vege table CUlture.i t S;i .. t . . . 1 tin; this district,' too.t eome of the finest hogs ever, produced In the na t on are raised, fattened and shipped. As an Instance of the truth of this statements one farmer from this dis trict, hauled two loads of hogs to the Enterprise market The hogs were Ujven months old and averaged 290 pound3 each. They were fed both up-, on barley and com. Land Is Sub-Irrigated. Practically this entire north sec tion of the county, In the south of the Grande Round river, Is sublrrigated. Between Enterprise and this section of the county there extend thousands upon thousands of acres of the ftn- of Enterprise, one of the first plon- i est p'ne and fir timber in Oregon. The eers to enter the valley, that the river, valley, lake and : the county took their name from an old Indian legend. Mr. Smith is an authority upon the his tory of the county. He states that the name "Wallowa" ... literally -taken means fish-trap, and that it was first applied to the river, lake and valley by Chief Joseph -and his Nez Perce braves. According to Mr. Smith the Indians came from the Imnaha and from Lapwal, Idaho, in the early summer, each year, to hunt and take fish in the Wallowa valley In ; and about Enterprise. And that upon one occasion the Indians placed a fish trap in the river, but not a fish was taken. The superstitious red men therefore concluded that the Great Sprlrit was angered at the subtlety of the Indian for trying to ensnare the fish In a trap instead of spearing them. They therefore never removed the trap from the river, but left it to be de cayed or washed away by the floods. It lingered long enough, and the occa sion was deeply enough Impressed upon the minds of the Indians, that forever afterwards the river was des ignated as "fish-trap" river, the In dian word for which is "Wallowa." From this origin the river, ; valley, lake and the town of Wallowa as well as the county took the Indian name. The Different Altitudes. It will be difficult to convince the traveler will drive for nearly twenty miles through thi3 one forest. It Is filled with ame of all kinds bear, cougar,- quail, grouse, pheasant, bob cat, pine squirrel, plenty of deer and an occasional elk -though the latter are very scarce. The black bear; are extremely plentiful.' The big unmolested forest catches and holds the snow precipitation dur lng the winter season. And during the crop growing season these snows melt, sinking Into the ground, and sub Irrigating the rich slopes which run downward to the Grand Rounde river. ' It is almost impossible to even hint of the wonders of Wallowa county in a brief newspaper article. The faith ful writer should have an entire spec ial edition" to himself, If he would do justice to the theme. ' Imnaha Is Named. Just as with Wallowa, so the name Imnaha , sprang from Indian origin Imna was the name of a Nez Perce brave. Members of another tribe or so the legend runs at one time stole Imna's nonies and departed with them for Idaho, going by way of what Is now, called the Imnaha river. Imna followed, overtook and slew the mar auders, and came back laughing the laugh of the victor, Imna'B "ha-ha" or laugh, gave the river the name of Imnaha...? , ... ,.; Neither Imna nor Chief Joseph nor eastern settlers of the fact of varying , yet any of the early Nez Perce would climates in Wallowa county. There are ! recognize their former fishing and as manv distinct climates in this coun- hunting grounds now. .They ., would tv as there a altitudes: and there recognize the. famousImnaha coun nro nitititdsB mnHnir from" two to 1 try,, where today -some of the best three hundred feet above sea level to what Is popularly believed to be 12, 000 feet, on top of Eagle Cap moun tain. . Consequently the occupation of the people here and their production var ies in harmony with this altitude. There are slopes of sugar beets, vast fields of timothy, clover, alfalfa, large apple, peacb, prune, pear and other fruit orchards, big herds' of sheep, cattle and horses dotting the hill ran ges, and thousands upon thousands of acres of wheat, rye, oats, barley, wav ing In the ripening breezes and under the ripening sun. There are fields of corn In the corn altitudes and corn fruit In the world W raised. The Imna ha peach, apple, cherry,-plum, melon apricot or fruit -Df whatever kind, is the most perfect that ever went ; to market. The writer has seen 86 Royal Anne cherries, each as big as an east ern wild goose plum, on a sprig of cherry limb eighteen Inches long and about half an Inch In diameter. The present absence of f railway transportation Is the solitary draw hack to Imnaha. but this was at one l'me the drawback in Illinois, Indiana .7V o, and all eastern as well as middle fates. -. Nn settler who hopeB to win In Wat -nwa countv should expect nature i to have already laid a railroad at ' his doorstep. Nature never does those things in Wallowa county, any more than she did those things back in New York state. But the settler who will come to Wallowa county and work just about half as hard as his grand parents did when they migrated to Ohio, he will get rich with Just half the energy expended. . 'o Fool's Erraud. Too many persons are knocked breathless by the appearance of a new and undeveloped country. But It Is no fool's errand to go into undeveloped resources and get those resources ex posed for the benefit of the world. No man can do It, who expects to wear silk shirts and have his plowing and seeding and harvesting done by mir acle while he sits around enjoying the good fishing in Wallowa county. While the struggle for bread and for com petence in Wallowa county is not nearly so hard as it Is in the thickly populated sections east, yet it 13 es sentially a struggle for bread and for competence, just the same. And lazi ness never won that struggle either In Wallowa county or In any other sec tion. But the man who is built of the stuff that spells industry and patience, can make a pocketful of money in Wallowa county to a scant existence in the eastern sections of the country. Men have started here without a pen ny, ten years ago, and today they are big sheep and wool growers, pr big wheat ranchers, or cattle men, or fruit men, with wide credit and with an everlasting independence around tbein. A man who is simply a man not an instable follower of every whim, but simply a man, can get any help within reason from the very un developed condition of the county's miroirrH H iiin rtrnw frrrm h unit from the timber, from - the mineral, from this and from that, a compe tence. And he can spend his declining years watching his children enjoying and conserving his competence, -while he goes out each day to catch trout from the streams or goes on after deer, grouse or some other wild game. Still Open to Settlers. f There are hundreds of thousands of acres In Wallowa county, still wait- lug for the settler. In times these acres will be dotted by the homes of happy, prosperous settlers. In the hill lands such Bettiers may get from the soil from forty to sixty bushels of wheat ' to the acre. Forty bushels of eighty cent wheat from a farm of 100 acres means a gross In come to the farmer of $4899.' This is vastly In Increase over the ' acreage yields to the farmer of the middle states, where an' average of about $12 an acre Is counted on. i r That there are thousands of acres of this wheat land still open to settle ment now, does not mean that this will be the situation for any length of time. Settlers are coming Into Wal lowa county on almost every train; and homestead houses spring up. with in twenty-four hours.' 1 The prospective settler needs to get on tne ground here at once, ne hopes to have a tremendous acreage to select from. 1 ' ' Wallowa county now is easy of ac cess. It Is penetrated from La Grande by a branch of the O. R. & N. railroad. This branch at present terminates at Joseph. In addition there is what Is believed to be the work of final loca tion at present being made by two corps of engineers op and down the Grande Rounde river, and it Is con fidently expected that this railroad will be laid in a short time compara tively. This road, If laid, will connect with the OR. & N. branch at Elgin, extending down the Grand Rounde river to Lewiston, Idaho. This will tap the whole north section of Wallowa county. : ''-. ,-.,':' ,:::,-.. The Sheep Industry. At present there are approximately 200,000 head 'of i sheep. In i Wallowa county. Two train loads of 24,000 head were r shipped, out pf the county Montana during the present season, J The wool clip of the county alt though light during the past spring, was oyer 1,000,000 pounds. Nearly-all of the clip was stored In the Wool-' growers' Warehouse at Enterprise, from which place It was sold. . The income from this sale aggre gated about $180,000 cash a neat sum to be poured Into the channels of trade In and about Enterprise, and to find Its way to every town of the county. Space forbids the mention of every sheep man in the county, but some of the prominent ones are as follows: Falconer Brothers, whose clip the past spring sold at the highest figure of any in eastern Oregon, bringing 17 3-8 , '. i 1 and: ice creaii ceots for the cca'rsa and 16 3-8 cents SELDER'S CANDIES tor tne fine. K. u. Makin who, in ad dition to his Bheep industry conducts j a large shearing plant near Enter-, prise. Litch and Funk, a firm alau ccn- J ducting a shearing plant near Enter- ( prise. Holmes and Craig. F. and Omar , &tubblefield. Graves Brothers, J. Dob bins. P. Bodoin. D. Tuc ker and a ' store of others. ' ' : j These sheep men create a large re- j tall market for camp supplies and this self. 1( was by awiJnt that he drfit ed Into the furi.hure tnniness. He be gan by opening a email second hand furniture store. As the years went by his business' profited, and he added Are the Best on Earth. Stock Carried new furniture to his second hand Is f a. Superior huracter and I'lrm i Esjoy a .splendid lietaH and V) hole. : ; sale Trsde. $ J ? . m . : i iThe Selder'8 Confectionary store Is an institution which has won Its way Into the hearts of the people of the inrrpnRoa thA rtaii hnslnpaa volume citv. and eurroundine territory oe- rf iho ontir rmmtv ! f ause of the superior character of The cattle industry aha Is a big county Item. In the h.ll landa north and east, on Horse Creek. Joseph Creek, the Imnaha and tributaries, and along Snake river, cattlemen Ltlll run their cattle, and have a better grade stock handled by the firm, and be ctuse of the considerate and courteous treatment extended to all of the pa trons of the establishment. The proprietor of the store Is E. D. Selder. While Mr. Selder is not a na- stock. Finally he went into the fur niture and stove busine33 exclusively. Ilia business Is operated almost en tirely upon the installment plan, and ho is the possessor of a good trade, which is steadily growing. His prices are right, and his goods the best available upon the market. During recent years he has found his business Increasing with a rapid rate, and he has not only found it necessary to ma terially increase his stock but also to make a lare number of improvements. ) .. . Z&sy '' ' ':x:;:::':"' ' ' ' ' ' ':';::''vix:;:xv;-x; k : v.v.vv w.v .v.v.v.;- ,y- . , f , . " . - ' t'Zl -...,,..... j' ' Setter's Confectionery Store., : - '. Setter's Confectionery Store, of stock than in the early history , of the county. ,. , ,. ' t .... , All the stock industries of the coun ty find a ready cash market in Enter prise, where Hotchklss and Combes buy for shipment. . These ; shipments vary in frequency with the readiness of the stockmen to sell. ;1 vrij.r; i s n County Officials. ; i ! The following are the present county officials In Wallowa county, whose fidelity to office is simply char acteristic of the men and womeri who reside In . Wallowa; characteristic, that it Is of the "square deal" policy which has-always been the ground work for every deal that has been made, political or otherwise. Indeed, it may be said that there is no "po litics" such as one would find elsewhere. In this county it is a question of fitness and fidelity, not of political partisanism. And county, of ficials are selected upon their princi ples as men and their ability as public officers, and not upon the Btrength of any political "machine." ; ' ' It was thus that the following coun ty officials were selected: ; i County Judge J. B. Olmsted. '. Sheriff Edgar Marvin. j ' p DeDUty Sheriff C. E. Crow. Commissioners Sam Litch, W.i G. Locke. - "' ; ' 1 1 , Treasurer W. T. Bell. . . I - IT ."Assessor B. F. Miller. . ) " Supt Schools J. C. Conley. . ' Surveyor H. E. Merryman. !. Clerk W. C. Boatman. . - Deputy- Clerks C. G, Blly eur Miss Edith Odel. : Court House Janitor Chas. Glovan-onnl. P r. t 4Z, -1 ' Early Pay Freight Team In Wallowa County. DOES GOOD BUSINESS tive of the Grande Ronde VaW he;. COIJIJISSIONiFIRM hub tsiJeuv iue greater iiuniuu ui um i -j jmh V. t.-J life in It, and he has always a good s word for it. and the city of La Grande, J L its commercial metropolis. This does , not mean that he is unaware of the advantages of other sections of the great Northwest; nor that he seeks to depreciate them, but means that he has a full appreciation of La Grande and its tributary country, and that he believes . in administering praise wherever it belongs. It was about five years ago that Mr. Selder . decided that La Grande was good enough for him, and made up his mind to enter business, and to make the city, his home The Grande Rounde Cash company is one of La Grande's well known bus iness firms and needs no introduction to the public in the city and eastern Oregon! i ' The firm was established in the year 1900, and deals in all kinds of grain, hay, farm produce, and In lime and ce ment. A speciality is made of eastern Oregon hay, and in this line the com nanv noasesMB an excellent whnlenala He Selected the . trart which U mntlmiallv lnrronHlnir. confectionery business and by induB- The firm transacts a general commls try, and thrift, and the manufacture Bjon business, and it is ever in the and retail of the best of goods he has market for all manner of farm "pro succeeded in building up one of the ducts as its wholesale trade is best businesses in eastern Oregon, j heavy, and extends over a large ter- He manufactures all of his own can- ritory.' - -dies and ice cream. In the former he The company makes Its headquar not only possesses a fine retail, but 'ters at 1517 Jefferson avenue in a com a wholesale trade as well,, and it is'modious stone structure of its own. increasing every aay. his ice cream. Pre88 Lewis Is the president of the trade Is almost exclusively of a re- commuiy.' and its secretary is J. E. PATTISON BROS. OWN FINE STORE One of the most up-to-date and attractive grocery establishments' in the city is that of PattlBon Brothers Robert and H. R. Pattlson, composing the firm, ' "" , The Pattlson Brothers purchased their present establishment from J. D. McKennon about two years ago. Immediately after the purchase they added to the stock purchased, and have since continued to so in accord ance with the demands of the busi ness and own today one of the best paying institutions 'of its kind 'in the city of La Grande. They also at the same time launched a line of im provements, and tbelr store presents to the eye a decidedly pleasing ap pearance. The interior, besides being equipped wlththe most modern groc ery store fixtures, is also painted white, and ornamented with white decorations which add greatly to its general attractiveness. The stock of the store is extensive in character and the firm is able to supply every conceivable want in the grocery business. The firm follows out the policy of purchasing only the best quality of goods and disposing or them to its retail trade at a reason- tall character as the wholesale line is handled by the creameries In the city, and be has contented . himself with confining his wholesale trade to his candy department. ; He manufac tures none, but the best of candies and ice cream a fact which the pub lic is aware of, as is evidenced by his immense trade In both the lines, and In both of them, . especially in ice cream he has built up a splendid par ty trade. - He also handles all kinds of soft drinks, and in these as in the other departments he strives to please. Dur ing the cold seasons of the year he dispenses all manner of hot drinks. He will also during the cold season of this year serve cold drinks of all kinds, and also, serve Ice cream. As usual there Is not a sufficient de mand for these during those seasons of the year to make it worth while to serve them, but Mr. Selder has found considerable demand for them during past seasons, and has finally decided to maintain the two departments dur ing the winter months. ; ' . ' Reynolds, and both are well and fav orably known in the city, and through out the state of Oregon. ' ; Mr. Reynolds Is identified, In addi tion to the firm, with some of the large business enterprises of eastern Oregon. ahd is a breeder of blooded horses. . His horses , are well known throughout he west, and whenever he has seen fit to place them on exhibition- they have -generally -been awarded the highest prizes. , HAISTEN CAN SUPPLY FURNITURE WANTS If you are looking for anything nice in household furniture or something In handsome ranges then go to F. D. Halsten on the corner of Jefferson and Fir street, and you will have no need of searching further. Mr. Halsten has been a resident of the city of La Grande for the past 12 years. He has watched it grow from a small village Into a good sized town, and he realizes the great future which It has before It, and he 1b here to re main, and to assist in its development, and just in the proportion that it progresses he will branch out in his business. Prior to entering the furniture bus. lnesa Mr. Halsten was identified with able profit, and of having one price for railroad work, serving in a ticket of each and every one of Its customers, and to this policy may be attributed much of his success. . flee. His health became impaired, how ever, because of the close confine ment to the office, and as he says him- CITY SUPT. IS WELL QUALIFIED "When J. A. Matot accepted the po sition of street superintendent for the city of La Grande he brought with him twenty-five years of experience In railroad construction work, and ever since he went Into the service, and especially during the last year In the street Improvement work being so conducted by the city, he has prov en a most valuable man. Mr. Matott .gained his experience, as has been said, from being identi fied with railroad construction work. He saw service as road master for the Pennsylvania Railroad company; the Northern Pacific Railroad company, and the Oregon Railroad & Navigation company. He also saw Bervlce as con ductor, and when his railroad experi ence and work li summed up he was In the service of the different roads In the various capacities mentioned for the period of 25 years. i When he was made street superin tendent for the city his vast experi ence was taken into consideration, and he was found to possess all the quali fications necessary for the discharge of the duties of the office. So satis factory has been his work that he is now serving his fourth term, and to gether with City Engineer Curtis, he ia now in charge of the vast amount of street improvement work, and the fact that he is superintending it Is a guarantee that the work will be faith fully and efficiently performed in all respects. !