Onxn )i.t,,ric,l Hoolftj ir iimi Grook County Journal COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY ARCH 21, 1912. to'Z2B 'mZ 5l!T7JH Jr,tirTl" VOL. XVI NO 17 Crook County- Its Resources Tie Northern Pacific I I'Hucd a I 'm iiamiilili fcriptive of Central Oreitott. Tim I hnll-tunea are t a (.-i it 1 1 y good and there are plenty of them. They tlrpict (arm scenes anil show off our resources to good advantage. These illustration cannot help hut imprest Umn the minds of home seeker the truth of the statement made in the descriptive mailer. It says of Crook county: The earliest development of new, extensive territory in Con tral Oregon will bo exttetienced In Crook County, which occupies mi area of about H.000 square I imlos--liirger thun several of our stolen Individually almost ex netly In the outer of tho state. The railroud emerges from the canyon of Willow Creek, a trl bumry of the Deschutes. In the j Mivrilmfn .. . a.. .. I- 1 ...-. .Ancui.ij , v riH.a i """y- viuv vuuiuy . greatiy oiver- has been found to be suited to Billed luits resource, ond if U , horticulture for domestic pur already In process of transfor-1 p(ises, c.-rtaiu specially favor tiiutinii from a stockman's coun- nble, but limited, localities have try toarartningcommmilty. Vet ' vnM proved very profitable In this trausformaton has but just 'fruit production, but no .just begun. Grain, vegetables "d ; cU,jm can, at this staSe, bo made fruits have as yet been raised j tml t10 r0Klou a tt whole solely for local consumption. !,,rovo a valuable fruit country Grain, in largo part, has been j f rom a commercial standpoint, hauled to the small mills, ground j Vl,st of the Deschutes tho Into Dour, and shipped further ' country rapidly merges into the Into the interior for use by other ;grnat pine timber area of the stock-raising; communities, or Intern slope of the Cascado has been cut for use us hay. Iu Mountains. This is true of the tho northern part of tho county a ! entire length of the country west largo area of laud la already !0f the Doscbntes. under cultivation, but thero was) South of Crooked River, along not. until tho coming of tho rail- Ub.0 Deschutes, is a large Curey way making outside Jnurkets Act irrigation project, where the uvnilable. any real incentivo to Central Oregon Irrigation Cotn cxtensive farming or careful ,,liny has a partly completed sys cultivation of the soil. Kntor-' tern planned to water 21,.(XK) prising farmers have found how-1 acres of land, ever that their land is capable of ; Alfalfa, clover, and root crops yielding as high as 50 bushels of particularly, thrive on the ir wheat to the acre under a proper ; riguted lunds, and it will bo pri system of cultivation. An aver- j ,arily a dairy district, although age yield at tho present time is smull fruits produce abundantly, from 17 to 25 bushels' with care-! Winter apples also seem to do less methods of farming. J wen BUj lllllny orchards are be- Tho main cultivated grain area ng planted. Sugar beets are of Crook County lies to the eust j sald to be a good crop here, being of tho Deschutes River, and j 0f eMrn tine quality with a- high north of tho Crooked River, I percentage cf sugar. They yield Which HoWS into the Deschutes i Bn tons and nnwirH to tho nnre from the east. In thia district are located tno Agency flams, , comprising about 175,000 acres; j tho Hay Creek district, with 80,- 000 acres; the Ulizzanl Ridge district, with 75,000 ncros, and tho Culver, Lamonta together genorally spoken of as the "liny stack" couutry Opal Prairie and numerous other small districts. Mecca, Vanora, and Madras will be tho railway shipping points for tho Dig Agency IMuins Ind liny Creek country, and Metoliuit, Culver and Opal City will bo tho outlets for Little Agency Pluins, Opal Prairie, and the Lamonta county. Tho rainfall, about 15 Inches annually, is sufficient for sucess ful dry farming, but a large area can bo irrlgatod and ultimately will bo devoted to intensified farming. Under dry farming methods in this locality, where good farming Is practiced, ryo produces 10 to 0 bushels, barley i5 to 50 bushels, wheat 20 to 45 bushels, an aero. Potatoes do particularly well as to quality and they proJuced from 50 to 150 bushels an acre. Corn does well where properly handled, bring ing 100 bushels an ncre. Dry land alfalfa produces 3 crops a season and will average G tons .an acre or more. Successful results are obtainod by summer fallowing ouc-half of one's farm regularly. mm I'rkliiK hoto by Amcrlumi I'ivhm AiMoclullon, News Snapshots Of the Week kid the aliile dcmrtiunt to nenil tr.M.p. MIhk Antile Ycuiinm-. the fiiinoiiB khitf of KIiiiii win dlm-overi-d iitul fruKtniled. The Connie of Warwick eauie Kruit grwinir has been under-1 ... I taken in a smiill way in northern .Crook County. nd the district; ' Thesa projects are unlike any others in America iu several respects. Water is taken from i the Deschutes River above the town of Bend, the temporary terminus of tho Oregon Trunk Railway. The Deschutes is an ideal stream for irrigation. From 'Bend the country slopes gently to tho Crooked River and through much of the country thQ irrigation canals appear to be rapidly flowing brooks.1 Tho water is melted now from the Cascude Mountains and it is de livered at the remotest limits of the canals as limpid and pure as it is in the original mountain streams. Thero is here nothing; of the Hat, barren waste appear ance seen in tho usual partially developed Irrigation district. Tho country is dotted with jun iper trees, and most of thorn can be pulled over by a stout team of horses. The sale of juniper for fuel generally brings in enough to cover the cost of clearing the land. Tho juniper is also val uable for lead pencil wood. The original cost of water rights in tho Irrigation project is fixed by the state, which makes no law as the center. A farmers' co charge for the land itself. In J operative irrigation system is also the earlior segregation the water watering about 15,000 acres from sight is $10 an acre for irrigable laud and $2.50 an aero for land not susceptible of cultivation. Improved lands in private owner- rfr) if) 7 MWfm IIikiIiI AmuiiiUfH. the Norwodnn -lcrer, rattled Unit he lini! succeeded In reaching the eoutta pole on Pee. 14. Word also came Unit fiipliiln H-tt of Crent Itrltaln hail reached the (xile with the exedltIon which Milled on the Terra Nova. Mm. I'niikliiirMi ami Mr. 1'iMliUlc Lawrence were Jailed an the result of the aulTriiKette riot In London. Minn Clirixtnliel rnnkliurst ew-nped mill eluded the iMillie. The iin.tiiii-.-r In l'eklnu. t'lilua, continued their butchery. killlm thousands, and AtulMUituidor Calhoun ship have been selling at from to $100 to flOO an acre, and it is claimed are low priced at f 100 to f 150 an acre. Payment for water rights on thexe irrigated lamia may be made one-fourth down and the re mainder in five equal payment", due in one, two, three, four and five year, at fix r cent interest. Three years are allowed alter mak ing application and fir-t payment, within which to cultivate and live upon the land. The settler may live upon it ninety day and place one eighth of the irrigable area under cultivation, or he may live upon it neven dava and place one fourth of the irrigable area under cultivation and build fence, and, a house having not leas than 200 square feet floor area. Correpon dence is invited by the Central Oregon Irrigation Company, sue-ce-sors to the Deschutes Irrigation and Power Company, with ofiices in Redmond, Oregon, or 415 l!iil way l.xchange liuilding, Portland The company will furnirh appli cation blunkg to be filled out for application to the slate for this land. When a settler has selected the land he desires and has made this appfrcation, arrangement must be made with the company for a perpetual water-right contract. Over four hundred miles of canals and laterals, costing to exceed 11,000,000, have already been con structed. In this immediate lo cality are the towns of Redmond, Bend, and Laidlaw, all thriving and giving evidence of a good future. The entire section is be ing rapidly supplied with schools and churches and-stores. Electric power and light plants are pro jected to utilize the water-power, and development is rapidly pro gressing in every way. It is a wonderful dairying and stoclc country, raising the finest of sheep and cattle. 'The climate is ideal, the rainfall being 13 to 15 inches annually, with over 300 days of sunshine. The winters are not severe, January and February usually bringing a small amount of snow, but, as a rule, work can be carried on throughout the entire year. Large quantities of wool are shipped from this region nnd large wool warehouses have been constructed at Madras and Metolius on the railway to store the wool each year prior to its shipment. West of the Deschutes River, around Sisters and Cline Falls, another company has secured a Carey Act segregation of about (3Q.000 acres, with the town of Laid Squaw Creek, which flows into the Deschutes from the west a short distance south of the mouth of Crooked River. Ia this vioinity ;iyr;A ) imnl.nl cincly sctrimu, died, sued neventynlx. A plot to dethrone the new to America to deliver a aerie of lecture. Redmond-Sieters barley, oats, wheat and root crops are raised, while clover and alfalfa are ex tensively grown and produce fine crops of good quality. With the opening of outside markets by the railway this entire region is bound to become a noted dairy district and the dairy herds are already being greatly improved. The eastern slope of the Car cades is heavily timbered, and this! timber can only be conveyed to the markets of the world by way of the natural routes down the vari-' ous mountain streams to the Ore- gon Trunk Railway. An immense amount of labor will eventually be employed in working up this timber, and this labor must draw its supplies from and through the district mentioned. In the region about Rend and Sisters there are, now at least seven saw mills at work, with others expected to be constructed in future. The timbered the immediate, regions of the government reserves abound with all kinds of game, large and small The, streams are filled with the finest trout, making it an ideal district forhunlinz and fishing. Another enterprise of vast im portance in the devilopment of Central Oregon is that of the Ore gon and Wrestern Colonization Company, of Saint Paul, which company has obtained what was known as the military-road-grant lands, comprising some 800,000 acres, and is putting the land on the market in small tracts upon easy payments. The land com prises a belt- some twelve miles wide, and extends from the Wil lamette Valley on the west, east ward, almost entirely across the state. The more important towns within this tract are Sisters, Prine ville, Paulina, Riley, Burns, Nar rows, Vale, Ontario. The Coloni sation Company, whose main head quarters are at Saint Paul, Minn., with a branch office in the Rail way Exchange Building, Portland, Oregon, will gladly furnish illus trated literature telling about this land. At Bend, which lies 156 miles south of the Columbia River, the pine timber belt covering the east ern foothills of the Cascade Moun tains, already mentioned, reaches down to plains and railway, and there the juniper of the plains largely disappears, the merchant able pine timber taking its place as one journeys southward. The Deschutes River in this district not only supplies water for irrigation but develops enormous potential water-power. In its course to the Columbia River it is estimated that it will generate more than 1,000,000 horse-power. Water-power electric plants have already been established at Bend i f C(3t.N1 f-Vi and at Cline Falls, near Redmond, and numerous filings on power sites have been made with the ob ject of supplying cheap power for dairy and tarm machinery as the couptry develops. Crooked River at the point where it is crossed by the Oregon Trunk Railway is a narrow chasm about 310 feet wide, and with perpen dicular walls of lava .rock. The canyon is spanned by a heavy and very fine steel cantilever bridge, the rails of which are 320 feet above the bed of the stream. The river and canyon form a natural dividing line between northern and southern Crook county. Before the river is compressed into its narrow canyon, however, it drains a fertile valley, some thirteen miles long by three to ten miles wide, including both low lying alfalfa lands and the higher orchard lands. t Important tributaries of Crooked J River are McKay, Ochoco, Bear and Camp creeks. The two princi- pal ones are the e McKay and Ochoco, which drain small valleys and provide valuable reservoir i sues lur irrigation, What the U. S. Reclamation Service is said to consider one of the best reservoir sites in the entire country is found on the Crooked River east of Prine ville. Numerous small irrigation enterprises are now in existence, and there are many well cultivated farms in the valleys. It is claimed that there . are 30,000 acres that can be irrigated from the Crooked River and affluents. In the vi cinity of Prineville there are con siderable areas new irrigated from 8,000 to 10,000 acres and fine root crops, large quantities of alfalfa 5 tons to the acre and some fruit are raised. In the center of the Crooked River valley, somewhat east of the main line of the railroad, and at the junction of the main line of the railroad, acd at the junction of Ochoco and McKay creeks with Crooked River, is Prinevilla, the coreity seat of Crook county, formerly a great trading center for stockmen, and now one of the most important and attractive towns in Central and Eastern Oregon. Southeast from Bend and south of Prineville is the principal home steaders' district of Crook county. Here, there are hundreds of thous ands of acres of the very best sage brush and bunch-grass lands avail able for entry under the 320 acre homestead, or dry farming, act. Under this act the homesteader is permitted to take up 320 acres of land suitable for dry farming and secure a pajent in five years by re siding thereon and doing a specified amount of improvement each year. The land is particularly adapted to the growing of winter wheat and other grains by dry farming methods, and is readily accessible by team or automobile from Prine ville, Redmond or Bend. Grizzly School a Good One The patrons of the Grizzly school who are the most interested co workers in the county in their school affairs, gathered at the school hoose last Friday to greet and cheer their teacher and scholars in their last day's work. The teacher, Mr. R. S. Ooff, the directors and patrons of the dUtrii t have worked hand in hand, for the last two years in building up the stand ard oi their school, atd now feel that they have the best rural school in Crook county. The patrons were free to express their appreci ation of the year's work by pre paring a bai-ket dinner equal to anyone'ejThanksgiving feast. Mr. Goff is strong in advocating the policy of developing the child ren's mind on national and local timely subjects, capable of reason ing and conversing on subjects of the day, so subjects were chosen by the graduating class and essays were written which expressed their own ideas on the following subjects: , "Protection of American inter ests in foreign countries," by Ver non Chitwood. "The Sixteenth Amendment," by Clifford McKenzie. "The value of an education," by Mattie Bland. "Amendments to the Monroe Doctrine,"' by Glen Chitwood. The children did extra well with their work and it will no doubt prove instrumental in interesting them in questions of their country and community. A mathematical contest with a neighboring school was arranged but as the challenged school failed to appear the scholars battled with one another for honors and were pronounced lightning calculators by the visitors. The prize offered by the teacher for the most headmarks was won by Manilla Dee, who missed but three words in in the entire year's spelling lessons. After a few complimentary re marks from Mr. Chitwood ana Mr. Bland, school was dismissed lor the year. Great credit should be given the directors for their willingness in providing modern school equip ment. Last fall they purchased a fine Waterman-Waterbury heating and ventilating system which is a friend to school children's health and there has been no absences on account of coughs or colds during the last term. The directors will be free to indorse the Waterman Waterbury system to any school, and are contemplating the purchase of a "Waterman Sanitary Drinking Fountain. Desirable Homeseekers A Portland paper states that numerous colonists have arrived in Central Oregon since the re duced rates went into effect. They are rapidly absorbed on the im mense area of undeveloped land in that section. The interior of the state is re ceiving more settlers this spring than ever before as this is the first period during which the railroads have been completed all the way to Bend. Many people leave the trains at Madras, Metolius, Red mond and intermediate points and are taking np lands in the vicinity of these places. Every through train from the East brings scores of homeseekers. Many go to Portland and from there radiate to other portions of the state. The most pleasing sit uation in connection with this sea son's colonist movement is that an increased proportion is seeking homes on lands in preference to posilions in the cities.