Crook County oiiotM VOL. IX. PBINKYILLK, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, SEPTEMBER 21, 1905. NO. 40 n ffl CO fry. filacksmithiflg That In The Kind You Get A Slock of Farm Machinery always on hand A. H. LIPPMAN & CO. Furniture and Undertaking la n g e s A T P O H T L A N D P U I C E S EL-rfLMWE3a J. E. Stewart & Go. SuccfOf To MICHEL CO.) General Merchandise Announcement Boyd Adams having purchased an interest with 0. C. Dunham in the New York Racket Store, and they having purchased the stock of Clothing and Furnishing Qoods of B. Gormley desire to annouce to the public that the new firm has moved intp the building, formerly occu pied by Mr. Gormley and will do business in our new quarters under the firm name of the owl easH STORE In our new quarters we have more room and in addition to the lare stock which wa now havo we will add several new lines making our store the most complete and up-to-date in the county. We wish to call your special attention to our Shoe Department as we intend to make this our specialty and cater to the wants of the particular Thanking you for your patronage in the past and with a cordial invitation for all to call and see us in our new quarters we are Yours respectfully, DUNHAM & ADAMS Pleases nN J. II. WIGLE'S (Successor to) CORNETT & ELKIIVS'S x m m KM fjTA Professional Cards &. Clliott, iPrimtitili; Ortgon. 9. st'ss KCmntjf SPAjftteimm) . Belknap cf d wards &Ajfiiamt amd Surytms. Ottro fiw Sr Cmtt 1t,mmmJt i SPrintttiiU, Ortfn. iPAjiician mint Smrgon Cailt mmtmrtt promptly tlajf r miff At si mmM W mi Sfrwti. !PrinvilU, Orayom. The Journal Printers To The Particular YovhOkdkb for uy thing from a rard to a catalogue. Commercial printing a apeeialty MAIN STREET, NraK The Ochoco ltmi)UK PRINEVILLE, OREGON WILL PORTLAND LOSE INLAND TRADE? Business Men Express Bit ter Feeling Against Ore-gonian-Moye to Boycott Portland Wholesalers. Arc llu- Portland wholesale merchant to low- the I'aX.ftOO trade which flow into their coffers annually from rrineyille Ix-cati?? of the recent atudicd ffforta of the Oregonian to undermine the busi nera interests and aocial standing of Crook county? The question is letter answered by the feeling now prevalent among the heaviest buyer in this city that Portland should no longer he the mecca to which the local merchants go each year to expend a half million dol lars ho ving good. The exact intent of the loeal business houses ia better expressed - in the follow ing communication, and the wenti ment exprept-ed therein are echo- e by thme who rpend all the way from $.V) to 1100,000 yeurly in the etate'a metropolis: "Editor The Journal: Owing to the fact that the Portland Ore gonian claims to voice the aenti ment of the jeople of Portland, I think the time ban come for the bufunt'sa men of Prineville to change trie nyntem iy wnien they I have done hnainefs for over a quarter of a centur', and to take up with a trade center where we aie not etamped a barbarians, and where we can meet those people who take our money and our company on a kkhii-k that will come nearer equal; "The bupinepg men of Prineville for the past 25., years have been doing from $300,000 to - tJiOO.OOO worth of business with Portland every year only to learn now that we have no standing and that the community is cono3ed only of a class of law breakers and horse thieves who are totally obnoxious to the rest of the ftate. t There are good Kople in San Francisco, Seattle, Tacoma and Spokane who would be delighted to break into the 1450,000 worth of biWineBtt that went out of Prineville during the past 12 months, and they would be satisfied with our in tegrity and our methods of doing business. "It may of course be possible that our 25 years of life on the sage brush plains has made us uncouth, and that the isolation of 25 years at hard labor has dis qualified us from associating with gentlemen represented by the Ore gonian and the Telegram, but I see no reason on earth why we should allow them to come in and demand our business and money with one breath and denounce u? as horse thieves and gamblers with the next, and to assert that no man's property or life is safe. I "We admit that there have been crimes committed in Crook coun ty. W hat county is free from it? We admit that sheep have been killed and that horses and cattle have been stolen, and it the Ore gonian will show a condition in Portland that is any better I will admit we are not doing our best to put down lawlessness. But at the Bame time there ia a vast difference in the conditions sur rounding Portland and Crook county. It may be said that every man in Portland is under police surveillance and that it. would be difficult to travel the short dis tance occupied by a city . block without meeting or seeing a police officer. At the same time there is not a Portland paper sent from the press that does" not chronicle a crime. Some : of them arel atrocious. Gambling lias been carried on openly, up to the last six months, ever since Portland was named, and the depravity of Portland's famous "North End" lus never been outdone in any city of the United States. In this respect Portland has not changed ruurh lately; if it baa the change has not been for the better, and the city itself ia not an yet exactly rid of hold up artists, pickpockets, roof (limbers and footpads, ii-l them say what they will. "On the other hand, Crook. coun ty has an area 16 timea larger than Multnomah county with less than 5 per cent of the population, or about 8000 souls. Of this amount 1200 rexide in Prineville, 1200 mora in Haystack and 2000 more in the Deschutes valley. The rest are acattered over an area of 70(10 square miles of ('rook county' mountains and deserta, aiid there ia one peace officer to patrol the whole county, collect the taxes, attend all civil business of the several courts which cornea to a peace officer, summon juries, witnesses, etc., on the munificent salary of 12500 gross per year out out of which all clerk and deimty hire must be paid. And yet the Portland Oregonian decries the lawlessness existing here and ac cuses her officeraof negligence. "I for one don't like the system and I have no hesitantcy in saying that if the people of this com munity have the self respect, that I believe they have, they will get together in an effort to secede from the race of grafters and petti foggers represented by the Poit land Oregonian and Telegram and do business with some city where the people at least don't know we are quite so. bad. "Business Man." iTROLBLE OVER BEND PROJECT State engineer J. II. Lewis and President J. O. Johnston, of the Deschutes Irrigation & Power Coin pan v, are in a dispute over tha interpretation of the National! and state laws in regard to re-! Claiming land under the Carev act. President Johnston is seek ing to have the work done by his company, for the reclamation of alout 80,000 acres of land near Bend, approved by the State Land Board and Engineer tawis, so that patents will issue from the (iovernment for the land. Mr. Johnston has submitted maps and plats of the canals and ditches constructed by his com pany, covering - the land in question, and ahks that they lie approved anil the necessary certificates issue. The point of difference is that Mr. Iewis cannot see his way clear to issue a -certificate covering any tract of land to which the water has not equally been con veyed. Strictly speaking, each tract of land, as the Engineer understands the law, means each 100 acres, the amount of land a settler may take up. In this in stance he says he is willing to waive that construction and ac cept the conveyance of water to the highest point on cash potion of land. Hesavs, also, that he is willing to take as evidence "that water has actually been con veyed to each tract" the fact that a ditch was constructed" to the' land even though no water has flowed through it. Mr. Johnston contends that a canal of sufficient capacity to carry water for the total number of acres to be segregated, construct ed to and through the land along a course from which laterals could be constructed to all parts of the land, is all that should le requir ed of the company. Mr. Lewis argues that as the reclamation charge of $10 per acre and the perpetual annual main tenance charge of $1 per acre becomes a lien oh the land, as soon as the Government patent issues to the state, and the com pany is entitled to 6 per cent interest on the reclamation charge, no land should be included in the patent other than those sec tions to which water is actually supplied. , Mr. Lewis says he finds some ' land included in . the application of the company that is 10 miles I from the main canal or nearest lateral. As some of the laterals will be expensive to construct, the Engineer takes the ground that they should be built now. CROOK COUNTY LAND GOES FAST Assessor's Records Show That 411 Persons Last Year Acquired Land in This County. The rapid acquisition and set tlement of Crook county's public domain is shown in the abstracts from The Dalles lapl office furnish ed to Assessor Lafollett in which is detailed the individual final proofs duiing the past tax year on homesteads, desert claims, lieu land selections and timber claims and the acreage of each. Between March 1, 1904, and March 1, 1905, there were 411 receipts issued by The Dalles office to persons who had acquired land in one form or another in Crook county, the total area ap proximating 00,000 acres. From the Burns land office abstracts of 1000 acres in the eastern part of the county were forwarded, and the etate land board has furnished a list of lands in thia county deed ed by the state during the year's time, all of which is assessable. The total new land from all sources, which will be placed on the assessor's books for the first time this month, amounts ib round numbers to 150,000 acres, and in consequence the assessment roll thia year, owing to the many new holdings acquired by indi viduals, will show several hundred new names among the list of tax payers. : Assessor Iafollett has not as yet received the abstracts of lands purchased under the jurisdiction of the Ldkeview land office, but ! thwe are expected in a few da vs. The latter district includes a border of several townships along the southern edge of Crook county, where a large1 numler of timber claims have been taken during the past twelve months ami these will also add to the total new assess able area. RATTLESNAKE RIDES IN AUTO While Percy F. Megargel of Buffalo, N. V., and David F. Fas sett, of Lansing, Mich.,'- the two transcontinental automobile tourists, Fent out by the American Motor League on a voyage of ot discovery in their touring car, the "Reo Mountaineer," were pas sing through Ixdge Pole, Neb., they ran into a group of rattle snakes sunning themselves in the trail. The sighting of the .snakes was too sudden to admit of stop ping the flying automobile and the reptile? were run down. When the rapidly revolving wheels struck the rattlers they were thrown nign in tne air, one big angry fellow coming down in the ton neau of the car. The brakers were applied and both men jump ed out of the car, leaving his snakeship in possession. The rattlesnake finally dropped to the ground where he was dispatched. The Reo Mountaineer has now covered 2,300 of its 10,000 mile tour of exploration, reports being sent into the American Motor League covering each section of the road. Mr. Megarsel thinks there is a good chance of the United States government build ing a transcontinental road in the near future" and the American Motor League with its twenty thousand members is working along these lines: At Cheyenne, sprags were at taohed to the rear axle of the Reo car and sand tires taken on board preparatory to a hard journey over the Rocky Mountaids, which will be encountered a fewmiles west of this city. The tourists attired in leather and corduroy and 'tanned until they are as brown as Indians, ap pear to be in the best of health and expresa little fear of the hard ships that may come to them should they get caught in a snow storm in the Cascades or Sierra Xevada mountains and he , com pelled to spend the winter among the snow capped peaks. It ia expected that Portland will be reached on September 28. PORTAGE ROAD PROVES ITS WORTH Portland and points on the Upper Columbia, above Celilo, are now connected through the medium of steamboat lines and the Port age Road, for the steamer Col umbia has completed a trip to Cehlo, the Portage Road is operat ing, and the D. P. fe A. N. has established a hi-week ly service between Portland and the Hi Eddy. This information was given out tfusrjm irai, oi ine wpen River Association. Mr. Teal states the question of rates and the schedule for the service on the upper river will not be published until it has been determined iust wuai can i aone ai me present t. i i . . stage of water and with only one craft running, but work has start ed on the raising of the Jerome, the new boat which went down about two weeks ago, and she will be operating again soon. Htr machinery has been removed and the remainder of the work i an', A to be easy. The service on the Middle River will remain the same as at this time, with the exception that every Wednesday and Saturday the Regulator line will send one of its steamers to the Big Eddy and there load from the Portage Road such freight as has been ac cumulate. . With two steamers navigating the waters above Celilo, ' the traffic will increase and more facilities will be added to those on the Middle River as business war rants. Promises of heavy trade are so great on the upper stream that it is not thought possible for the Columbia to look after any but that confined to the districts on the north bank. On the op posite side there is a tremendous amount of wheat awaiting ship ment, and this has provwn that there will be much business work ed up of an entirely new nature. CANAL AND TUNNEL TO COST $500, The specifications for the tunnel and main canal of the Klamath project are in the hands of Chief Engineer Newell, at Washington. The specifications cover the con struction of 3000 feet of tunnel 13 feet wide by 14$ feet high, 3000. of concrete-lined canal, and ten itnloa rf north nnnal ?f tint rr r) on the bottom, 70 feet wide at the top and 11 feet deep. This work will cost about 1500,000. The main canal will have its intake at the the head of Link River, and will form a feeder from which water will be turned through laterals to irrigate the entire east side of the Klamath Valley, Thi3 mammoth canal will- carry 1500 cubic feet of water, which is one and -a half times as much water as is now running in Link River. Link River connects the Upper Klamath Lake with Lower Klamath Lake. The river is now at the lowest stage ever known, and in ordinary years mere win De enough water in Link River during the dry season to till the canal. The velocity of the water through the tunnel will be ten feet a second. The di .m nd drill work at Keno and on the tunnel s!te there has been finished, and the outfit goes to the Clear Lake and Horse Fly Flat reservoir sites this week. The drill work on these two sites will be the last, on the Klamath project. For the past six months the Reclamation Service a has been experimenting with different kinds of material found there with which to manufacture Portland cement, and at last material found from which an excellent quality of ce ment can be made. From samples sentto Roosevelt, Ariz., recently, cemeiit was manufactured at the Government millv and a small briquette made which showed a tes of 5G5 pounds, which is above the average.