Eugene Or Grook County Jomnraa' COUNTY OFFICIAL PAPER, $1.50 YEAR PRINEVILLE, CROOK COUNTY, OREGON, THURSDAY, AUG. 22, 1912 Entr4 t tbe pwtftfllfl t frfnvll) VOL. XVI NO. 39 WORK FOR THE MITCHELL ROAD THE GOVERNOR CLAMPS THE LID Redmond Officials Re sign. THE MILITIA WLL NOT BE USED Sheriff Balfour Replies to the Criticitmi of Governor West. The atmosphere at Redmond is -clvnrinir up. No longer will it be necessary to carry out the throat of the governor to place the town un der martial law urilcaa the mayor and marshal resign. Both have done no. The cane against Sheriff Balfour Is not yet willed. In lib reply to tho governor's the sheriff says : I:.-, .,v a-rr-V ,t,icL . -'it I VJ A Good Thin for Crook and Wheeler. BOTH COUNTIES NEED IT BADLY I'ltoUMi by mortem Fnma Association. Naur a nnfin( Kx President Itooserelt and Governor Hiram Johnson of California were nominated for president and rice president by the w OnapSuOlJ progrwialvs party contention at Cbtcaco. Oorernor Wilson of New Jersey was notified of bis nomination by the Democratic Al h lVk party by Senator Klect Ollle J nines of Kentucky. Henry n. Curran took cbarne of the aldermank Investigation Into the al- k'Red "wide open' at Port -an Print was dualroyed by Bra. conditions to New York city. General Clnclnnatua Leconta, president of Haiti, perlabed when bis palac-e the following report to the clr- itricturea cuit court that term : "A great deal of our attention "Believing that Governor Wefct haa been given to a petition signed in hia aoHralled crusade against evil, j by some of the citizens of Madras -id far as it applies to Cnxik county, ; reeiiing that wrtain evils there ex is not conversant with conditions as Int and asking that the grand jury they actually exist, and if he was , geek to eliminate them. Upon in loss imietuous his censure of county . vestigation we find that Madras Is -officials would not be so severe, j an Incorporated city, and that mu Sherift Balfour of Crook county, nicipal ordinances are in force pro who has been publicly criticised by vlding for the punishment of people the governor, states that the gov-j operating the establishments, of rnor'g activities should be directed j which complaint is made. We also in this county at those "higher up," ; find that the municipality of Madras whose acts may le responsible for j employs a marshal and night watch what lax observation of the law as nian at a suliry of $75 per month jniight or do exist here. ! each, and, further, that there has "Since I have been office," says' been paid into the city treasurer of ; Mayor Jones and the city marshal Balfour, "every grand jury of this j Madras the sum of 1725 from April j would hand in their resignation, county that has had before it viola-i 2, 1910, until the end of that j The officials were given until Mon- laws to put them out of business, and, continues the governor, Sher iff Balfour has enough laws to put disorderly houses out of business without throwing the blame onto a grand jury. The governor has also discovered a section of a code which gives him practically unlimited authority to carry on investigations, appoint special prosecutors and prosecute public officers of any kind for de reliction in their duty without the assistance of district attorneys or other constituted officers if such constituted officers fail to respond. Saturday Governor West threaten ed to call out the militia unless tions of the disorderly house law and month. - similar olTenses brought there by me "Under these circumstances this and my deputies from Incorporated grand jury believe that this matter towns of this county hns refused to is one that should be left to the report indictments against the keep- j jurisdiction of the'eity government ers and their inmates, and grand ; of Madras, and that the taxpayers juries before my administration of the county at large should not be have made reports to tho effect that j called upon to bear the burden of it did not fuel that Uie taxpayers in I whut is in the jurisdiction of a general should bo burdened with 'municipality. This conclusion ap- the expense of keeping the towns plies not only to the city of Madras cleansed when money for that pur pose is paid by the residents of those towns Ir'o the city treasuries. "What encouragement is there under those circumstances to make arrests In Redmond or other cities within my jurisdiction, throwing extra expense upon the county, when the taxpayers, through their grand juries, refuse to indict and indirectly thereby instruct me not to make arrests for such offense ? The governor should direct his ef forts toward the education of Crook county grand jurors before censur ing a county official for doing what his constituents instruct him not to do. "While I am of the Bame political extraction as the governor, he knows as well as I that it is impossible to enforce statutes where you have not the backing of public opinion, and when you are without the support of the grand jury the case is hope less and his expressions regarding the inactivities of myself and associ ates are without foundation of truth and have no' merit in them aside from their intended grandstand ef fect in other communities. Our grand juries are made up of the responsible stockmen, ranchers and business men of Central Oregon, and it is to those . that the governor should direct his criticisms as to the enforcement of law in Central Ore gon. This condition may not apply to other communities where the gov ernor has been active, for I know nothing about conditions any place else, but these facts do apply in my Jurisdiction." The grand juries to which the sheriff referred were those of May, 1910 and 1911 and of October 1911. The May grand jury in 1910 made day to comply with the demand. Meantime Jones and the marshal were convicted of gambling, and their resignation followed. Portland Delegation Sees Great Country but to all municipalities in Crook county. We say this not in any spirit of criticism, but because, owing to the work of railroad con struction now in progress in this county on a large scale bringing in a vast number of transient people, this question and similar ones prob ably will arise in other incorporated towns and we do not feel that the county at large should be called up on to bear the expenses of inter ferring in matters covered by local ordinances." A similar recommendation was made by the grand' jury of Crook county in October, 1911, when a number of disorderly house cases were brougst to its attention in Bend by one jf Sheriff Balfour's deputies. These grand jury reports are on file with the county clerk and are a matter of record in Crook county Governor's Reply to Balfour. In response to statements made by Balfour that he has found the grand jury would fail to return to dictments against disorderly houses, and others of a similar nature, the governor declared that the sheriff needs no grand jury indictments to do his duty in this respect ; that the law is ample enough to give him authority to make raids and that the sheriff should have gone ahead on his own initiative if the grand jury was not with him. The governor says too many of these officers are endeavoring to shoulder the blame off onto some" body else, like Bob Stevens of Mult nomah county, who wanted to come to the next legisla ture and ask for the passage of a lot of laws to put the road houses out of business. He has enough Prineville, Or., Aug. 18 R. G. Callvert. (Staff Correspondence Oregon'tan) Crook County Is not worrying about autumn rains, al though more or less moisture has fallen throughout Centra,! Oregon in the last three days. The bar vest season has been delayed by previous rains, wtncn came in me growing season, wiin promise now of goo I weather tho farmers are preparing to gather in the greatest crop ever known in the district. Through smiling fields of prom se, the advance guard of the Portland delegation to the Oregon development league meet ing at Lakeview traveled a great er part of yesterday. The day was cool, the rain had laid the dust, every farmer had a cheery greeting, induced perhaps in part by his prosperous outlook. The machines hummed along without a single untoward delay. In Wasco County some damage was noted. There the harvest is earlier than in Crook. Iu some of the fields grain in sacks lay exposed to the elements, but these were the exception rather than the rule. In tbe Agency Plains district, near Madras, the exceptional season has put hundreds of new homesteaders on their feet and has brought encouragement to the older settlers of the district. Before the advent of the railroad the Agency Plains were not framed for scientific agricultural methods. There was not much induceinenttogrowgrain. There was no adequate market. Many farmers merely scratched the ground and were content to plod along and postpone the day for more active effort to the timo when a rail outlet would he pro vided. The railroid two of them have now come. Along with the rail roads has come also tbe Oregon Agricultural College. It has es tablished a dry farming demon stration tract near Madras. It is showing by ocular proof the value of conservation of moisture and the fact that born and alfalfa can be grown on dry land. If one may judge conclusively from farm appearances, the set tlers have had greater faith in the growing of corn than they have had in the possibilities of day-land alfalfa. Agency Plains farmers have put in a suprising lot cf corn and, as a rule, it looks almost as well as that produced on tbe demonstration tract. A person could not lose himself in present-day Central Oregon cornfield as he might in the fields of Iowa or Illinois. Even if he entered a large one he could see his way out over ths tassels. Tho dry land corn is a rotating crop to be fed to stock. In a suc cession of seasons like the pres ent one it could be made to take the place of Summer fallowing. There would then be "a crop on every acre every year," which is the doctrine the college experts have been preaching to the farm- ors of districts where the rain fall is not actually scant. The taking up of corn growing is a promise in itself of more live stock on the farm. It is a pro gramme in which Portland is, or ought to be, intensely interested. It means more money for the farmers, better prices for the consumers and general prosper ity all around. Two railroads into Central Ore gon have changed materially the aspect of the coontry. Yester day I traveled by automobile over a route practically the same one followed two years ago, Then the railroads bad not been completed. Yesterday I ate lunch at a thriving town that was not in existence two years ago, and again at dinner I had the same experience. Maupin was the lunch stop for the party. It is not yet much of a town, but it has two general stores, a drug store, hotel, rest aurant and several other business enterprise. It lies In the Des chutes canyon on one of the old wool trails from the interior to The Dalles. Wasco connty has replaced the pioneer ferry with a new bridge' across the river, and has built roads down both sides of the deep depression where runs the foaming river. These roads are on well-planned grades grades that are the easiest of any lead- Forest Service Would Stand Half the Cost Get In and Help. The people of Crook county have an excellent opportunity to draw the trade of southern Wheeler and the rich John Day valley in Grant county in this direction if they will only get together and second the ef forts of Supervisor Ross of the for ing into tbe Deschutes canyon. ' t ,; w. rwt nri Tbe result is that Maupin is bt-1 by a road through coming the trading and shipping the 0choC(J regen.e center, with two railroads as out lets, for a district about 20 miles square. Metolius is the other town less than two years old. Two years ago it was a characteristic Central Oregon flat, with a juniper tree here and there. Today there are an excellent hotel and several prosperous looking business I houses. Central sidewalks are laid ' where the jackrabbils 24 months ago were wont to scamper. The trip of that portion of the delegation which proceeded the main Portland body begin at The Dalles It gave the seekers fcr kuowledza of their own state a glimpse of Duf ur, Wamic Tygh Valley, Maupin. Shantko, Ante. ope. Gateway, Madras, Metolius and Lamonta, with a stop for the night at Prineville. The route followed was not the shortest be tween The Dalles and Prineville, but the party is out to see the country. The visits to Wamic and Agency Plains were really side tirips. This journey covered a distance of 170 miles by automobile, after a t rip of 88 miles by rail to The Dalles. And at that, the party at Prineville is not yet at the center of Oregon. Mileage figures do not mean much to many readers. If one should say that the distance cov ered by automobile Saturday was almost the equivalent of a journ ey from Portland to Seattle, per haps a better idea would be given of the ground covered and a ful ler knowledge of the magnitude of what that country which Port land people refer to in general terms as Eastern Oregon amounts to in extent. Whereas the advance guard goes to Lakeview by way of Burns and Colonel Hanley 's P ranch, the main delegation will follow the route that leads by Silverlake, Gum mer Lake and the Chewaucan The latter party will leave Bend Monday, attend a development meeting at Fort Rock and spend the night at Silver Lake, proceed ing Tuesday to Lakeview. Work Wanted Girl wants place to work for board and go to high bcIiooI. Address "O" care of Journal. 8-22 Stud Horse for Trade. Big registered Percheron. Will take broke horses. Walter Quack enbush, postoffice box 254, Red mond, Oregon. 8 15-2o The gross receipts of the Ochoco 'national forest for the year last past approximated $12,000, one tenth of which Is set aside for the purpose of building roads in the national forest in the state in which the revenue is derived. Mr. Ross does not know of a place in the state that a road is more urg ently needed. He Joes not know of a place where such a compara tively small sum of money could open up such a vast country and serve so many people as by opening a road from Crook county to Wheel er county over the Ochoco west branch divide.' The whole thing could be done for f 2,500, he says. He would have the choice of two routes : one by the Mark's cret k Notice. , Parties driving beet cattle on Burns roail to Prineville can et pasture at Colby's ranch, one mile off the road. belov the old Davis ranch on Crooked river , 8-8-lm Crook County Journal, county official paper, f 1.50 a year. i pass and the other by the Ochoco pass. If the Mark's creek route were chosen it would cut off the Howard postoffice and the upper Ochoco settlement bat the rotd would be lower and is less liable to be blockaded by snow in winter This route would necessitate tie building of ten miles of new road. If the old Ochoco pass is followed the road could be built with less expense but would not be as good. It would be higher up and subject to winter storms that would greatly hamper travel. Manager King of the Wheeler County Trading Company was in Prineville last week and he strongly advycated the building of such a road. He said the trade of his country would seek the railroad at Redmond instead of going to Shan iko, Condon and other points. A road in this direction, he said, would turn the travel this way. It would furnish an easy access to the markets of Crook county fcr the fruit raisers' of that section. All freighting would come this way. It would also furnish a good auto road to Wheeler, Grant and Faker counties. Of the 12,500' to be raised for bailding the road Crook county's share would be 1600, Wheeler coun ty 1600 and the forest service $ 1 ,2 )0. Mr. Ross has already taken the matter up with Judge Butler of Wheeler county and the county court of Crook county, if both counties agree to do their part of the work the road will begin at once. Mr. Ross wants the active support of the commercial bodies in the counties affected so that he can make a strong showing of the needs of Central Oregon. If the people will co-operate with him we can get the road. It is one that should have been built years ago. Help it along. J Organ Wanted. Gool second hand organ winted. Must be in good condition. Ai' drees Mrs. W. P.. Stacks, 'Lamonta, O e. 8-22