Crook :C4imy ' Journal -a j VOL V. SQUAW CREEK. A Trip To Sisters And Its Results. A Prosperous Country. Whtre Blooming Fields of Clover G root Tlie Eve on Every Bide. Leaving Princvillo on Wednef (1)' morning we took the overland flyer for tli a famous Land of 1'ineH in the sbsdow of the everlasting snow of the Three Sisters. Jour neying down Crooked river we saw some of the finest wheat nnd other it-reals tlmt it hns ever been our lot to behold, nUo fields n( fine al falfa, Thoxo productive lands show conclusively what water will Mo for the foil of thin count; when properly oplied. All along the river from town to where the rond leaves the valley to cross the 'des ert" to the DcM'Imtog one encount ers pleasant homes where not many year ago a broad cxpanso of sage hrushjmet the'eye. We firmly lw lieve that what Ii:ih been accom plished along thur ivcr may ltd one on the upland if the water can he had for the purpose. After leav ing the valley we paw over nhoiit eight miles of tahlu land that ap pear to 1e equally an rich noil as that along the river, which Is con tcmplated Ijcing covered by Rome tf the numerous irrigating ditched now leing constructed on the Des chutes. The anil in a composition of land and volcanic ash that Jinn ln-cn found to bo very productive and having great lasting qualities. In placet there in nothing hut tone and thin it called , "scab laud," altho the writer 1ms seen many German families living on much worse looking farms than these lands would make if proper ly handled under irrigation. After dinner at the bridge on the, Deschutes we ascended a gentle loe to another table land which stretches out for several miles and then down into shallow canyons which are now being rcttled upon. On every quarter section of this land almost, is room for a home for some enterprising rancher "when the water comes." That part of this land now considered re fuse will in timo produce fine bunch grass, if kept fenced und not overstocked. About ten miles from the Des chutes wecomo to the section of country that is under the Squaw creek irrigation system, where we find a number of fine looking ranches along the. road, but we are informed that the best ones are too far from the roJdtobedisecrnable. This is the beginning of the fa mous Sisters clover district and the fields in ill directions were red with blossoms. , An , occasional nice looking garden meets the eye In this section. Thero is still an abundance of Innd subject to set tlement and plenty cjf wateT to irrigate- it. A short distance lieyond the crofsing of Squaw creek we find tlio nucleus of a future town in ths store building of Smith Brothers, also several dwellings and stables, ilacksmith shop and hotels. The vroj'rietore ft Uw store informed PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNT!, OREGON, us tbat the present year has lcen a good (me it trade, as t lie impu tation is increasing rapidly and they alo supply a lurge number of the summer sheep camps. For milt in all directions from Sisters the surface of the country is gently undulating and is cover ed with a growth of line pine tim W wltieh being removed leaves the land ready for the plow. This timber is easily removed as all one has to do is to girdle the tree one year and the next they are dead and io no considerable harm and can be removed at leisure. Rising alwve the forest and seemingly springing from the level plain, rises the towering form of lilack Butte, one of the most sym etrical mountain peaks in tins west. This peak is nearly seven thou sand feet above sea level and is a prominent land mark for many mile around. Some twelve miles to the south ward arc the snow clad summits of Mt. Washington and tho Three Sisters, which furniah the store house for water to make this coun try a solid clover field. When most streams In this part of the state re drying up for lack of nourishment, Squaw creek and all other streams having their sources in these snowy mountains are at their best. . So far as gardening and small fruits are concerned this section of country is only in the exiH-rimen-tal state, but where thty have licen tried small fruits seem to do as well, or katcr than on Crooked river. In the course of time, it in the writers opinion, all kinds of hardy fruits will 1 produced in abundant. , , On Lower Squaw creek about fourteen miles from Sisters some ef the finest gardens ever seen are said to be growing. Water melons as large as water buckets and pumpkins that will weigh seventy five pounds are common. Two crops of clover hay are pro duced annually and then the meadows furnish fine pasturage for stock uiitil snow flics. Verily it seems that after the first few years of hard work the lines of the rancher in the vicinity of Sisters has fnllen in pleasant places. Baker City Republican: Just cause for complaint exists in the custom of eomo sheep buyers who drive their Hoiks leisurely through the country, devouring tho past ures of residents. It is quite com mon for a buyer to start out with the purpose of ranging all summer and fall on tho territ.wy used by esidont owners, and then take his stock beyond tho reach of tax gatherers. Thus, is a district mado to support stock from which it gets no benefit, and -the owners of thh transient herds is skipped in tho payment of taxes. Also the resident is eaten out of house, and home, and the county loses a good citizen and taxpayer. The Lake County Examiner recently called attention to this injustice)," "which was made conspicuous thero by tho reveges of sheep estimated to number 50,0(10 being driven from Crook, Sherman and other north ern counties, to California. Union county has complained of the same practico in tho northern por tions of her territory, and several dietrkta might lie named where like predatory habits inflict losses upon resident people, without any benefit being derived for tlio -coun- OUR DESfcRT LAND Its Transformation and Outlook. . From Barren to Fertile. Am Seen by a CWnereeted Observ er Who Tt.ia of It Bright future. rul DrUnaj li Ftatlmd Ttitgnm, A long as bay , is raised with no other labor Iban harvesting and has ready sale at $ 5 prr ton, tho tedious work of diversified farming will lie neglected and kept back, though the prices of the pro ducts arc good. This will icmain the case until the grazing lands are taken up on a more devennfied scale- and the bands of stock Jreducod in num liers, which wili ncesrialy in crease the numbtjof men engaged in the business. While it will in crease the demand for hay it will also increase thedemand for farm products, as the Kpu!ation in creases. Aa the lands under water supply at present are about all taken the prices of lands of a till able nature are increasing at a rapid rate, and it will not bo long until the lands will reach such a value that the small farmer will only bo able to buy a small tract of land. He K necessarily en gsge in diversified farming on his small plat, The soil in this section of coun try is noted for its fertility. Wa ter is only needed to make it pro duce anything that can be grown in this latitude. The supply of water is being increased by artifi cial means in different ways, and every means will be exhausted, ho long ns it offers successful farming, and this will be as long as there is an available acre left in the fertile sections. Artificial rditches an now the principal means of sup plying tho water for irrigation pur poses, but storage by moans of mountain reservoirs is being ad vocated and built in some instan ces, as well as successful prospect ing for artesian water it, many in stances. Where there is such vegetable-producing soil and water going to waste sufficiently to uti lize it, it is safe to say tliat the en terprising American will find a means of uniting the two elements with profitable results. It is a remarkaWo coincident of nature that within reasonable dis tance of all of these fertile sections there aro belts of fine timbered lands in the mountains, where ma terial can le had for improving the lands. It is a fine grade of timber and in sulucient quantities for all purposes. These timber lands and the farming lands, in many in stances, can be had from tho Gov ernment for the mere price of fil ing nnd locating fees, and a small acreage price in some "cases, and are being taken up at a rapid rate. And this will naturally continue until all are taken up. Several Government surveying parties have been at work in this section dur ing tho past summer, and as fast as the surveys are completed the industrious homeseeker is on hand to make his selections. While the best is being taken as fast as it is aim-eyed, and in many iustaa- AUGUST 22, 1901. ces prior rights have been acquired by previous settlement on the best before the survey was made, many good plats now suitablo for homes arc being culled over, and many remain vacant for years to come. Yet every foot of this land will be taken sooner or later, and the vast empire of Eastern Oregon eventu ally settled up by the industrious husbandman, added to the already great and thickly populated West ern Oregon, the state will indeed increase in magnitude and in pow er as a factor in this Government. To the stranger life on the "Ore gon desert" would seem monoto nous and lacking in interest. Thr sagebrush-covered plains, the bar ren, rockribbed mountains of wastes, the dust whirlwinds anc the mournful howls of the coyott at night, the isolation from rail roads and the imaginary lack o: society, all seem repulsive to tht person from "civilization." Bu; there arc points to break this mo notony. Aside from the romanct connected with life in the country already described, there are many things to occupy the mind and give contentment. The first of al of these is the confidence of suc cess from the start inspired by th universal success that surroundi one here. Give one confidence ii iuccess for every blow of labor per formed and for every cent of mone expended and contentment is sun to follow. But there are other at tractions here. The scenery o. Eastern Oregon is independent o: any in any other part of the state In nearly every county numerou hot spring, ! with a tcmperatun sufficient to boil an egg in a fes minutes, gush from the earth. Tal rock pillars are to be found a many points extending high to ward the heavens, as straight anc uniform as if chiseled by hnmar hands. Wild game, bear, deer antelope and the 'smaller specie; roam the plains and foothills am mountains, and fish are abundan in the streams. The wild life anc daring riding of the buccaroos alst have interesting features. Tele phones connect this section witl. the outside world, and the punct ual mail service brings the dailv papers to the most remote point, ere they are three days old. Then are also many historic points t visit, where noted battles wer. fought with the Indians and when forts and camps were occupied b; the soldiers. These are, of course, aside fron the industries of the country, bu go to make up its features. Moe of the population is made up fron men who formerly settled in West ern Oregon, and while they stil love their old "Wcbfoot" home they will tell you that they woah not give the exhilarating life oi the dry "desert" for the easy lift in "wet" old Webfoot. And they will tell yon anothei thing that, while Eastern Oregoi is now known as a stock countr; almost exclusively, in a few ywir she will rival her Webfoot htfi as a producer of nearly everythinj that grows on the farm, and stil raise stock and wool on a lurg scale. An Eugene agricultural edjtoi ,aw a hay baler at work a nd pro ceeded to say m his pnper (ha: threshing Wai in uii bb&t through out the coinu-y. SO. 37 GENERAL HEWS. Items of Interest Gath ered Here and There. Somo Stolen, Others Not Oullinsrs Prom Our Exchanges) News Notes of th Week. Timely Topics. This week the Baker Republican will commence using its new Mer genthaler typesetting maehine, which has been installed ready for use. Tnis linotype is of the very latest pattern, and cost, laid down, about 14000, V ' " "" John . and ; Tom Considine, barged with the murder of Chief t Police Mcrideth, were arraigned before Judge Emory, in the Su perior Court, and both having dead not guilty the trial was set or September Kith. Timber fires have been raginjj or nearly a week on Butte creek md Thirty-Mile, near Fossil. The Butte creek fire was started by ono , Jrant, who was burning a log and et the fira get beyond his control. Jrrnt lost 1000 posts and quantity f cordwood. Fish Hawk, chief of the Cayune ribc, died of consumption at hi lome on the Umatilla reservation iast Sunday. He was a son of th-j anions war chief of the Cayuses, Young Chief, who was conspicuous n the wars of the tribe during tho Ws and 60's. Baker City has more labor un ons than almost any other town n Oregon. It has a plasterers ind a masons' union, a plumbers inion, a carpenters' union, a paint ers' union, a typographical union, ind steps are being taken to orga lize a cigar makers' union. ' John Winters, who was arrested or the Selby smelting works rolv- wry, has confessed the crime, ami o far $130,000 worth of the bul ion has been discovered from the ay, where he sank it. Winters' confession saves him from punish nent, aeco-ding to promise and he fill receive 123,000 offered as a re gard. The state has brought suit ' tgainst Sylvester Pennoyer, George .V. SIcBride and Phil Metschan, is governor, secretary of state nn4 tate treasurer, respectively, dur ng the period between SeptemWr SitO, and January 1835, to re over the amount of the defalca ion of George W. Davis, clerk of he school land board sppoistel y them. When the old cows on the maintain range look down anl eo the big stacks of winter fw l :hat are punching holes in the at nosphere of Harney Valley tki tforcsaid cows lie down in tlm hade of a pine tree and lauh till heir tallow gets all out of shape, -ays the J'ew. And the littl- Tether lamb that don't know any.-' hing about h;iy, is sleeping nwa v 'he summer tbat is giving him 'lip start towards 12.30. We hope Hint the Democrat?-? bolters i Ohio will take warning md lasro their only nro-scapel :andidato before he coa aLu tC iway.