U of 0 Eucene Or Crook County .Journal COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUG. 1, 1912. EDtr4 ftt the pomUitftm at I'rtnvlll OrtgoUt MtcoDd-ciaJMi matter VOL.XVI-NO.3C Secretary Fisher Interprets the Application of New Homestead Law Washington, July 25. Every homestead entry man who made hii initial Ming prior to June ft, liU2. unJ who liiid not submitted final roof prior to thut date, will bo expected to complete hi proof under tho throe your homestead law unless, by October 4. next, be Dies with the loeel land ofliee a statement to the effect that bo wishes to complete proof under tho old law which his tiling was mude. Thin, in brief. i the in terpretation which Secretary Fisher places um the now law, and he holds that under the lang uage of the act, such interpre tation la mandatory, and no din crellon is ivon him. Senator Boruh, of Idaho, re cently wrote the Secretary ask ing as to the consequences which will follow tho failure of an entry nun who bad made entry prior to June 6 to elect to make proof under tho old law, and inquiring whether he might not proceed to prove up under tho old law, If he Hhould have complied with the terms of that law at the tiaie of offering proof. In reply, Secre tary FUlier quoted a provision of the three year taw, Inserted when tho bill was In conference, which stipulates that entrymcn who In itiated their homesteads under the the old law, "by giving notice within 120 days after the passage of this act, elect to make proof upon his entry under the law under which the same was made without regard to the provisions of this act." In bis letter to Senator Borah Secretary Fisher says: "At the time this legislation was under consideration, and during the conference on the bill I expressed the opinion that leg islation along the lines proposed in my lRt annual report would be more advautagoous to the new law should not be made ap plicable to existing entries ex cent unon the election of tho hoinesteador. The bill was mod Ifled to meet certain of my sug gesttons, in some'of which you concurred, but it was apparently thought by thoso entrusted with tho framing of tho legislation that the advantages bestowed upon the homesteader under the now law were such that, it would bo greatly to the interest of all entry men to accept Its provisions Because thereof the department was directed to send a copy of tho act to each homosteader (as has been done) and It was ex plicitly provided that a limited privilege should bo acordeu to a previous entryman to elect to have entry taken t out of the operation of the new law. "It seems to bo plain under this legislation that tho failure of tho entrymen to elect, where the notice was mailed, subjocts his entry to adjudication under the new law without respect to the reason that influenced him or caused his failure to elect to have his untry adjudicated under the old law. "I think, however, tho provis ion of tho new law which vests the Secretary of the Interior wit h the power, upon a satisfactory showing under rules and regula tions p'rescribed by him, to re duce tho required area of culti vation, will permit the depart mentto prevent any undue hard ship and to bring abont a sub stantially uniform administration of the two statutes. Tho new law in reducing the period of r 8 idenca requlrd, has at the tame time attempted to establish cer ttin safeguards to Insure bona fide and progressive cultivation. "The requirement Is that 'the cntrymon shall, In order to com ply with the requirements of cultivation herein provided for, cultivate not less titan one six t tenth of the area of bis entry, beginning with the second year, and not less than one eighth, be ginning with the third year of tho entry, and until tinal proof.' The old law required with res pect to each entry proof of 'cul tivating the same for the term of five years immediately succeeding the time of tiling the aflldavit.' Tho words 'the same' can refer only to the entry, and if strictly construed would re quire the cultivation of the entire tract entered for tho entire- per iod of tho five years. Suet a construction, however, would have been, in my judgment un reasonable, and tho language of tho act has properly been liber alized In its construction by the General Land Oftlco by holding that tho cultivation intended to be required was only such culti vation as husband like methods and tho circumstances of the case reasonably justified and per mitted. It would have been a liberal construction of the old law to have established the gen-. erul rule for which the new law provides that of requiring the cultivation of ai least one sixteen th of the area during the second year after entry, and at least one eighth during the third year after entry. "The authority to require more than this amount, where the circumstances clearly justifi ed such a requirement as evid ence of good faith and bona fide homosteading, and upon tho other bund, the authority to accept a lesser area of cultivation under general rules and regulations, enables the Department to pro tect public interest and at the same time secure the flexibility essential to wise admintratlon. I believe that an even larger area could wisely have been required as a general rule, provided a re duction could have been permit- ed, wherever the ciscu instances justified. "It is true that it an entryman under the old law is to bo gov erned by tho provisions of tho new law ho would bo required to make proof that ho has cultivated one-sixteenth of his entry during News Snapshots Of (he Week ( its J( MW K WBm&l"Jhl W "Vry t k ;u iifivv ;.- .Lis .ivy ul;l -j pay. Members of he board are: 1, Daniel Wlllard; 2, O. M. EldliU; 8, Dr. Albert Shaw; 4, P. H. Morrissey; 5, O. K. Van Hise; 6, Oscar S. Straus, chair man! T, Frederick N. Judson. The board Is meeting at Manhattan Beach, New York. Many engineers have been called as witnesses and have told of long hours of duty at pay thoy consider Inadequate eongMering the risk and responsibility. , : r the second year and one-eighth during the third year and each suceiding year, unless a reduct ion Is authorized by general rules and regulations prescribed by the Secretary of the Interior. I be lievo, however, that In adjusting the new law to tho existing con ditions, It Is entirely proper for the Socretary of tho Interior to prescribe rules and regulations under which the substance of the new requirements will be obtain ed, withonl Insisting upon literal compliance with those require ments as to the perclse years of tho homestead period, during which the cultivation was made. In other words, I can, by regul ation, reduce the amount of culti vation for the second or third, or any other year or years, requir ing no specitlo cultivation there in, where the proof shows good faith and that the requiring cul tivation has In fact been perform ed, although not In the second or third years of the homestead period. ' Entries made under tho new law should as a general rule, be held to a bona fide compliance with its requirements, both as to the amount aud time of cultiva tion; but In view of tbo impract icability of applying the time re quirements to entries made un der the old law, I believe it is proper to establish a rule and re gulation that will secure the es sential feature of substantial cul tivation. This would be secured whero the old entryman has cul tivated one-sixteenth of his entry during one year and one-eighth of bis entry during the next and succeeding years, even though the one sixteeuth was not cultivated during the second year after his entry was made. "I do not feel warranted inj passing an entry to patent upon oue year's cultivation. Therefore the mere fact that a showing is made of cultivation of one eighth of the land at the time of proof will not in itself be suffi cient. I havo accordingly pre scribed the following rule to gov ern action on proof when the homestead entry was made, prior to Juno ft, 1912, but, through fail ure of election, must be adjudica ted under tho new law.. "Respecting cultivation nec essary to be shown upon such an entry, in all cases where upon considering the whole record, the good raith or the entryman ap pears, the proof will bo accept able if 't shows cultivation of at least ono-sixteenth for one year and of least one eighth for the next year and each succeeding year until final proof, without re gards to tho particular year of the homestead period, in which the The battleship New Hampshire went Into drydock in New lork for repairs after being rnmiued by steamboat Carml Thomp son succeeded Charles D. Hllles as secretary to the president Illinois authorities inrestigated Chicago and Alton wreck near Chicago, In which thirteen were killed. Lieutenant Becker of the New York police was accused of being partner of Herman Rosenthal, the gambler who was assassinated. Arbitration board began hearings on demand of railroad engineers for more cultivation of the one-sixteenth was performed.' "I beliovo it will bo possible," says the Secretary in conclusion, "to find proper methods of pro tecting all meritorious cases. If your intention is directed to any instances in which this is not be ing accomplished, I will be great ly obliged if you will inform me." Central Oregon Has . Wonderful Possibilities "There are few waste acres in Central Oregon, and instead of the posi-ible wheat yield of that region being placed at 45,000,000 bushels in the' coming years, I forecast fully 100,000,000 bush els," said Phil S. Bates, editor of the Pacific Northwest, an agricul tural paper of Portland, follow ing his return from a 2000 mile journey coveting 18 days, in the country beyond the Cascades. "I have been over that country on different routes," said Bates. "I have read many reports of its possibilities. But not until seeing tho country where the new homesteader is producing, with the crops ready for harvest and appreciating that tens of thousands of acres of this land was recently prononnced hopeless desert, could I realize what the future of the country really is.' "This country has wonderful possibilities. To the inexper ienced man. It at first appears im possible. But when you havo once crossed a basin which had nothing but jackrabbits and coy otes as representatives of life, and return a few years later to find scores of homesteads scat tered about it, and on these homesteads good crops being made, the inexperienced man must change his views. That is what is happening. Thatcountry is settling. Every man who goes and makes any effort to under stand the game, is winning. Most all tho southern and con tra! district have from 10 to 20 inches of precipitation. As any man knows who has followed toe progress of dry farming, any av erage farmer can make a crop with nine or ten inches of. water. They are doing it in Montana, and they are doing it in Central Oregon. Of course a man can not do this without using some sense, and applying well known dry farming principles. But the farmer desiring to learn will fiud it easy to acquire this knowlege. "I saw on this trip out in what has for years been known as the desert country, farmers that had wheat - yields for this season reaching 15 to 20 bushels an acre. This is' a good year for New Clifton & Ccrnett Building Men and teams are now at work excavating for the foundation of the new Clifton & Cornett building, corner Main and Fourth streets. The structure will be of concrete, two stories high, with a frontage of 38 feet on Main street by 100 feet on Fourth street. The Main street front will be plate glass, with big, roomy show windows for the dis play of dry goods, ladies ware, etc. The Fourth street side will have ample plate glass windows to prop erly display the different depart ments of the store gents' furnish ings, clothing, boots and shoes, gro ceries, etc. the dry country, but many of these with such a showing have not been compelled to adopt many dry farming methods. There will be few if any years out there when good dry farming methods will not bring forth wonderful results. "There is water in that country. By irrigation alone, and going outside the Deschutes basin, more than 1,000.000 acres of land can be cultivated. All that soil as a rule is rich, and when water ed, produces wonderful wheat crops. If only half of this ad ditional 1,000.000 acres beyond the Deschutes basin is sown to this cereal this year, the average yield should be 15.000,000 bush els a year. By using to better advantage water now on land of that country, and when the farm ers have a masket for wheat, 10, 000,000 bushels more than is now turned out is possible from land now irrigated. "Then take the dry farming possibilities. A volcanic ash soil is found practically everywhere. How much of the vast untouched area can be cultivated is hard to estimate, but when the people need food and are willing to work for it, there can be no deubt that the population of that region, which is now almost too swall to count, will multiply amazingly. Professor Shaw, tho Hill head of the experiment station work, said after a visit through the country wo traversed, that 100, 000,000 bushels of wheat a year for Central Oregon was not a high estimate. I heartliy believe it. Dry farming will accomplish won ders there If you will go into that great Christmas Lake and Fort Rock basin, where for years the road led for miles through a beautiful, level tract, and see the homestead shacks now being reared, and see what these first To be Ready by January 1 The store will be equipped vUk every modern convenience fcir the display of goods and the comfort C patrons. The cost will be mm where between 10,000 and rjeiO and will be ready for use about &m first of the year. The confidence and faith of these gentlemen in the future of Prine ville should inspire everyone to get in and work for the advancement F the town. We are the natural dis tributing point for an immense' scope of country. Our resource are practically unlimited, and with united effort Prineville should con tinue so be the biggest and beat town in ail this interior country. homesteaders are proluctng, your eyes will be opened, and I think the 100.000,000 bushel esti mate for tho wheat yield of the future Oregon will be declared fair. On our tour1 through tHe country I talked to the farm, and found him remarkably wefi contented. There are fatniUs from the Willamette Valley aai other parts of Oregon wbo ka taken up land and are putting into shape to make a for tan. They get this land for the filing fee, or pay but a few dollars ac acre. The first year they taw to do plowing aad prelimiaarf work. The second year tilt Ut land, aud perhaps sow rye or l.ttle wheat. About the tfeird vear they are in readiness te get a good crop, and that is what multitude of them are getting this season. Portland Journal. Good Roads Enthu siasts Visit Prineville Samuel Hill and C. P. Chamber lain of Mayhill, Wash., and C XL Babcock; of McMinnville, Oregon, were a party of good roads enthusi asts that passed through Prinevule last Friday on their way lo the Pa cific Highway Association, which meets at San Fransisco August 5. Mr. Hill is a son-in-law of tie great railroad builder, and like him. does things. Mr. Hill has rewJn tionized road building in the state of Washington. He had a big iil on his hands, and he knew it. He also knew that practical metbixMi given a practical test would do more to convert the farmer to his way of thinking than anything he could A or say ; sc he built seven milt nff the finest roadway under .the .sbb and presented it to the state E Washington. Each mile is built t different material, so that the wer tear and cost of the upkeep of -different kinds of road material is re duced to a mathematical certainty. Mr. Hill wants a Pacific higfrwsr from the Columbia river at BigKSt Old Mexico, he says. There wcuifi be only thirty miles of heavy . con struction work between Biggs smtf Prineville, and the road would brs open throughout the year. Tisie would give Central Oregon the win ter road to California, while thw road west of the Cascades could be used in summer. "In my address before the Pacific highway Associa tion I will call attention to the neai of a Central Oregon highway." Mr. Hill sent Governor West plan for the building of a road tliaf. he believes, if adopted, will mwoW tionize the road construction 'meth ods of this state. It is a survey ,f a road to be built from Bigss te Wasco, but the idea and plan con trolling it can be applied to; any other road in Oregon. (Contluued on page 5)