Journal. COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUGUST 19, 1909. VOL XIII-K0.36 Crook Cotumty JAMES J. HILL BEHIND PORTERS No More Guess Work About It. STEVENS MAKES FACT KNOWN One Thing Certain Road will be Pushed at Fast m Men and Money can do it Alt guess work ne to the power tx lit itl the fount met lou of t ho I'ortcr llron.' railroad up the Itm-hutes was cletl eiltely removed this wivk by tli nnuouiK't'iut'iit In Portland by John F, Stevens that ho owned ii controll ing Interest In tho prujeet, nud that tlu money for tlm count ruction of tho rnllroml win to lie furnlxlnd by James; J. Mill, jm r mnlly, ninl not as head of ilieitifut railroad system known an the Hill Uiicm. "Oil Im'Iiih HKel wvernl days ago If I hud any Interest In the Oregon Trunk, or If I reirtmiitcl nny rail road tlmt wen? Interested, I mild no, and the latter statement mill hold good," mild Mr. Htevenm. Attend Our Remnant Sale Now in full blast We are house cleaning-throwing all the Odds-and-Ends of the season into job lots that are marked down at a price that will soon clean up our stock. REMNANTS If you are looking for goods at a sacrifice, look over our remnant pile. You may recognize the goods but the price will be cheaper than "stealing. Lace and Embroidery Remnants Come and look them over. All plainly priced. Remnant Counter p,icM " z?..scue Little 11 a x--i v -"to. t i 1 1 ii ! Odd and Ends of Summer Shoe Lines. Bring $1.75, If 2, $2.25 and see what it will buy. Canvass Shoes, ScuS Shoes, Moccasins -all included in this sale. Men's Dres Shirt Remnants.' Come and see what you can buy for $1, 00 cent and 75 cents. G. W. "Hlnce then, however, 1 have Ac quired a controlling Interest lu tho project, have all necessary financial arrangements co'iiileted, ami the roiul will lie built aa taut as It can be reasonably done with men and money. The mutter In a personal one, ami I have no objection to say. lug that J. J. Hill, a an Individual, I financially Interested to any ex tent necessary to carry the road throtili to successful completion. "Plana In detail ore not- fully de veloped, but will become apparent from time to time, as condition may neein to require. It may tie said however, that the Oregon Trunk propones to provide as quickly aa practicable a northern outlet for Central Oregon, regardless of the de signs of any other tramiportatlon company," Having made thla announcement, Mr. Stevena refused to budge an inch, explaining that he waa not lu a po nil Ion to dine I one further Infortna tlon na to the plana of hlmaelf and hi associates. F.ffurta to make him talk further were unavailing. The Oregon Trunk, through It pureliiiewliy Stevena, backed by Hill, admittedly line gained a more eiib. Ntnutlal Identity than the rond haa enjoyed aluce It waa Incorporated, In the Spring of 1WM1, The transaction la lielleved to Indicate a firm tie. termination on the part of Hill to build a railroad Into California through Central Oregon. Deering Binder for Sale. A 6 foot Deering Binder for fate cheap at the Uao. Hodman ranch, near Culver. Money Savers. Odds and Not too late to buy a Parasol. Fancy Silk, all colors, at $2.55. Regular value $5. Muslin Underwear Remnants. This includes Gowns, Pants, Skirts and Cor set Covers. Remnant prices. ' Boys' Wash Suits going at less than actual cost. Sizes, 3 to 90 years. Madam Has your husband any excuse for not buying yon a good range?. Is there any reason why you should not have better cooking utensils? Let us show you the best line of Ranges in the town for the money. Also Crockery, Aluminum Ware, Glassware, etc In fact we have everything for the handy kitchen and the happy housewife. Screen Doors will help keep out the flies. We have them in all regular sizes. Screen wire, mosquito bar. Prices right ELKINS, FINE CROPS AT POWELL BUTTES Grain Fields Astonish Journal Man. HARVESTING NOW UNDER .WAY Plea ant Home Dot the Land cape Once Given Up to " Sagebrush and Juniper. The grain crops on the Irrigated landa In the Powell Butte section are wonder fully One thla year, and in almost every inatanre where the rancher ha pat In earnest effort in the seeding, planting and watering of hit field the return have been abundant. Dne traveling the Bend road i amaxed at the trans formation that ha taken place M that section within the put four years, when the landa that are now waving with heavy fields of grain, were a primeval waste of sag brush and juniper'. Many home now dot the pleasant slopes, fences and barns testify tl the industry of the population, and the water which has nude all the develop ment possible flow through the canal Hosiery Remnants Tan, blacks and other colors. The prices will make you buy. Extra heavy Misses Black Hose, size 9 and 10; 20 cent. Ladies' Millinery Anything at Just one-third the original price to send this stock a "glimmering." Come and see what a $1 will do. h..lH.i fit l IMPftRllD DOUMI ,. i sil SHI AS Vlll S .11 , U.1 ,.. l Prineville, Oregon and lateral furnishing th life fluid for II the vegetation and ttock of the ranches. One of the most noteworthy (accesses la the gralngrowing line i that of Pearl Fulkeraon, whose lands are located just west of the Nitwonger station, or more properly .speaking, the Dew townsite of Butte. Mr. Fulkeraon has field of as fine oats and ball barley as ever grew on any man' land, and It is a first-year crop, too. Grain harvesting I now under way, the binder re busy In the field and team are hauling the bundlea to the (tack, making ready for the thresher. The Powell Butte section Is making good beyond any question in the pro duction of crop. A few more year will see it one of the finest farming districts in the state. " Church Services. Presbyterian Church: Sunday School at 10 a. m. Preaching service 11 a. ra.; theme, "Law va. Grace." Union evening eervlce will 1 held at theMCthodtetchurchat8p. m. Rev. C. C. Babbldge pastor of the Presby terian church will deliver the dis course. Subject, "Pentlcoatal Power." Union young people' meet ing In the same church at 7 p. m. You are cordially Invited. These services deserve your patronage be cause they solve the problem of church unity allowing all to hold tbelr Individuality and coming to gether on the common ground of christian fellowship. Ends Corset Remnants. Closing out sev eral Btyles. Your ize is here at a saving Shirt Waists. We have a few dozen Shirt Waists that we have thrown on the Remnant Counter. Prices from 90 cents up. Children's Straw Hats 10c and up. Save money. Buy now OUTING ON THE UPPER DESCHUTES Lots of Fish and Scenery but Few Deer PRINEVILLE MEN TAKE TRIP Mystery of Monster in Crescent Lake Deer Hunting Near Diamond Peak. Omer Clay pool, Prof. E. L. Asiiujr, Earl Wurzwetler and C. A. Riddle returned home Tuesday from a 10-day trip In the country about the headwaters of the Deschutes, where they went for a vacation. While the party failed to hag any big game they enjoyed some floe trout fishing In both lake and stream and saw moat all of the points of interest la that dlMtrlct. The plan for the trip miscarried to some extent. Ar rangements were made to camp at Crescent Lake for the fishing and then move to th6 west side of Dia mond Peak for the deer hunting, but the guide who was to pilot the party Into the happy bunting grounds did not put la an appearance, so the hunting part of the program went glimmering. To those who do not know the country Diamond Prak and vicinity seems to be a vast area of brush and mosquitoes, with but very little game,,but to the initiated It Is said to be a fine hunting region. Crescent Lake proved to be a very pleasant recreation point. The lake is a beautiful body of clear, pure water, about 7 miles long and 2 wide and lies Just east of Diamond Peak. Tho majestic snow-capped mountain rlsiug above the timber opposite the camp and sometimes reflected on the surface of the lake made a grand and restful picture. The fishing here was fine. A boat or raft Is necessary to success and the best bait at this season is a whole crayfish Impaled upon a snell hook, and sunk to the bottom in water 30 to 40 feet deep. Many of the trout captured here were over 18 Inches in length. Crescent lake has become famous as the reputed home of a sea serpent or monster of some sort, many peo ple who have been there, attesting to its presence. Some say it is 100 feet long, others that It is 20 feet long, some say that it has hair on It and others that It has three murder ous looking heads on necks 30 feet long, which from time to time it stretches up above the water in on effort to spy out something which it may devour. Other people strange to the locality have gone out on the lake In boats and seen what they thought to be an island, and with the Intention of anchoring their boats have approached it, only to have it disappear. These are the stories that haunt the place. Ashby and Riddle constructed a raft and went out on the high seas looking tor the monster bat were nnabfe to see him. None of the Prineville party caught sight of the monster. At the ranger station at Davis lake Forest Ranger Currln told about the sea serpent: "Tes, there is something in t'ue lake," said he. "I have seen it at least eight times, once or twice only 40 yards distant. Sometimes it looks to be 100 feet long and sometimes not more than 20 feet. Its motions resemble those of a serpent very much, and it does look like it had hair on. It la a great school of small fish swimming near the sur face and crowding each other out of the water, ana tnose who nave seen It at a distance are excusable for thinking It a monster of some kind From Crescent lake the party went to Odell lake. This Is the finest body of water seen on the trip, and tne attractions onereu here lor a mixed party of men, women and children far surpass those of other points visited. There are plenty of boats on the lake for hire at reason able rates. These are owned by Thomas McCord who Is there in charge of them. lie lias several sail boats, aud when the waves are run ning from 4 to 6 feet high with a stiff breese, the lake furnishes fine sport for those who like It. A sail on the lake was an exhilarating pleasure for the land lubbers from Crook county. The fishing is good at Odell aud there are also some deer in the neighborhood. Another feature lu connection with camping at Odell Is that horses can lw taken to pasture a few miles distant and left there until ready to move camp, thus relieving a party of their care and considerably lessening tho ex pense on the item of horsefeed. The matter of grass or hay for horses is a determlng factor in camping out in that section.. The party came home by way of Davis Lake and Crane Tralrie. Davis lake is gradually getting to be a lake of the past. There is not much left but a mud hole. The water baa receded from the old chore line three fourths of a mile In some places. All outlets to this lake are nndergronnd passages tbJough lava, and they are supposed to have become changed In some manner so that the water Is gradually draining oat faster than It runs Into the lake. Crane Prairie Is the same old hap py fishing grounds, altboagh It Is too late In the season for fly fishing there. Grasshoppers look good to the big fellows, and It's a poor fish erman who can't go out there and fill a good-siied basket In a few! hours with trout ranging from 13 to 20 Inches )n length. Hundreds of bead of eattle are now pastured In the prairie under government range permits. Messrs. Ashby and Riddle made a side trip from Crane Prairie to Tay lor's Burn, with the ambtloa to bring venison to camp. Bat the mosquitoes drove them oat and they had tbelr 36-mlle hike for nothing. A summer trip Into the upper reaches of the Deschutesmakee an Interesting one, and splendid sport may be had fishing and boating, and with trained dogs a bear-banter would have ample opportunity to capture some bears, bat for a deer hunting trip the Cascades are a dead hard game and offer no attractions to one who has ever banted where deer are plentiful. Unless one knows exactly where to go, be will find do deer, but Instead brush and blood thirsty mosquitoes until life Is a misery. The killing of a single deer by camping parties Is the exception rather than the role. It to a matter of great moment. Among a score of camping parties met on the trip only two of them reported the killing of one deer each. It there to good deer hunting In the Cascades, It la a long, hard trip from Crook county to reach It. Where there to good deer range It Is s beeped out, the deer are hid in the brush where man can scarcely travel, or If these two diffi culties are not met, the mosquitoes are so numerous that bo one would care to stay. This Is the general experience. There are men who can go luto these mountains with pack horses and load them down in a day or two. But they know Just when and Just -Where to go. No Failures in Teachers' Exam. There was not a failure in the teach ers' examinations which were held in Prineville from August 11 to 14. Fif teen passed the Prineville board snd two more will probably pass i e., Lewis Arensmeier and Mina Magness. Dir. Arensmeier .took the examination in, Marion county and Mina Mseneas in Lane but their papers have been sent here to be passed upon. County Super intendent Ford was busy looking them over when the reporter called, He did not think there would be any doubt about either of them passing, judging by the papers be had corrected. He thought they could safely be placed in the list of those who were successful. although he had not examined all of their papers. The beet ermdes were made by Thursday Kent of Culver, snd Laurel SchulU of Roeland. Miss Kent got an average of 98 3-11 and Miss Schuts 96 3-13. "That's good work," said the county superintendent, "and it always gives me pleasure to examine each good papirs." Five wrote for first grade papers; tea for second grade, and two tor third. The names of those who passed are : Myrtle Scorein, Tumalo. Mrs. Delia Nichols, Laid law. Laurel SchulU, Roeland. Bertha Homey, Madras. Z. T. Gideon, Powell Battes. Kathryn Lowther, Madras. Christina Gibson, Post. Hazel Caldwell, Bend. Nellie W. Reynolds, Powell Butte. Florence Young, Bend. Thursday Kent, Culver. Edna Morse, Prineville. Kdna R. Pyatt, Bend. Verna Howard, Prineville. Mamie B. Howell, Sisters. Lewis Arensmeier, Madras. Mina Magness. Dairying Looking Up. The first of the week was pay day at the Pioneer Cream Company. Between $900 and $1000 waa distributed among sixty-five customers. This pay check every month looms up big as a factor in meeting running expenses on the farm. Some of our ranchers realize this more than others. John Kemmling is a firm believer in me cow on ine larm and this spring bought twenty head of good Jersey stock in the Willamette vallev. He is milking nine or ten head at present and his check for July was 68. We men tion this fact merely to show what can be done. Mr. Kemmling was thought to be "plunging" by some of bis neigh' bora because he bought so much milk stock, but bis judgment is working out all right. June 22 waa his first milking and his check for July shows what can be done for a starter. The Pioneer Cream Company can use double the but ter fat it now receives and then some, Get your dairy herd in shape. No danger of over supplying the market, ALL LITIGATION IN FEDERAL COURT Issues lifted from State Tribunals. DEFILE LAW IN CONTROVERSY Both Companies May Have to Use Same Track at Dis puted Points. The Deschutes railway controversy went bag and baggage Into the Fed eral courts, with the filing by Carey A Kerr of a complaint In Judge Wolverton's tribunal, asking for adjudication of issues along the en tire right-of-way from Madras to the month of the Deschutes river says the Telegram. Last week a restraining order was Issued by the same court. In behalf of the Oregon Trunk, tor the south half of the right-of-way, hearing cn which will be had here Tuesday morning, The new suit Instituted covers the north half of the line, and apparently lifts all phases of the con troversy from the state tribunals, where Injunctions have been and are yet pending. It baa been the avowed purpose cf the Oregon Trunk attorneys and In terests to get the whole case before the Federal Judges. This centraliz ing policy may have been Inspired by the readiness of the state courts to grant Injunctions at very critical momenta to the Harriman forces, or it may have been solely due to the great distance of Sherman and Was eo eonntles, where attorneys must often travel 100 miles for a hearing, and the court Is put to almost as great inconvenience when compelled to adjudicate quickly Injunction con testa. With all Issues before one Jndge and In one court, and that tribunal so situated tbat a hearing may be had whenever an emergency arises, the United States court in Portland to proving the most ac ceptable medium of justice In the circumstances. The theory of the complaint filed Is based on the defile or canyon law, enacted by Congress In 1875. This law provides that when two surveys pass through a defile having room tor only one, the court shall adjudicate the case, determine what is the beet grade, to what extent the two Interests can belnade to work in harmony and then give the rival claimants opportunity to get to gether on some common plan of action. In the event no mutual agreement Is reached, the court will arbitrate the question more fully, and decree who shall build the road, how It shall be built, and what traffic arrangements must be con ceded by the builder to the other line. The Secretary of the Interior, In approving the maps of both the Ore gon Trunk and the Deschutes Rail way Companies, declared the Horse shoe Bend district a defile within tho purview of the law, the effect ot this approval being to give both com panies a right-of-way through the canyon. Despite the Interior De partment's franchise, the Harriman forces persuaded the state court to throw the Porter construction crew out of the canyon. As the law con templates that two or more roads occupying such a pass have equal rights there, which the court will determine if not delineated by private agreement, the extraordinary In junction of the state circuit court against the Oregon Trunk left no other course open but an appeal to the Federal tribunal, which Is the proper one for determining ail mat ters pertaining to the defile law. The complaint filed asks the court to arbitrate the matters in dispute over the Horseshoe Bend canyon. The Oregon Trunk wants the court to determine the methods of building where but one line can be built, establish the grades and curvatures, and also say how the expense shall be shared between the two com panies insisting npon occupying the same ground. . The complaint also asks that where It is not necessary for both lines to occupy the same track in the defile, but yet are so close that there is more or less inter ference with work as a result of the two lines of survey running -very close together, that the court will adjust the relations between the two tracks bo tbat both may be success fully built and operated. Instead ot enjoining with the pur pose ot checking construction work, the prayer of the Oregon Trunk is that difficulties be cleared away, so that both companies can build. Harriman workmen are to be re strained only insofar as It Is neces sary to get a proper and full use of Continued on page 2.