3 THE MEDFORD DAILY TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREOON. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, 1900. Medford Daily Tribune Official Paper of the City of Medford. Published every evening except Sunday. MEDFORD PUBLISHING COMPANY George Putnam, Editor and Manager. Admitted as Second-Class Matter in the Postof f ice at Medford, Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES : .month by mail or carrier... .$0.50 One year by mail 48.00 TODAY'S WEATHER PREDICTION. Clear today and tomorrow. Warmer. ,: A rare and salubrious climate soil of remarkable fertility beautiful scenery mountains stored with coal, copper and gold extensive forestsstreams stocked with speckled beauties game in abundance a contented, progressive people such is lie Bogue River Valley. ": Average mean temperature.;.1.. 55 degrees Average yearly precipitation1 21 inches CONVICTION BY PETtJUBY. The case of Charles Nickell presents a strong sidelight on. the methods employed to secure convictions in the Ore gon land fraud cases. : : . .'. Mr. Nickell was convicted of conspiracy to suborn pcr ' jury upon the testimony; of self-confessed perjurors, who hoped by manufacturing damaging evidence against him to secure immunity for their Frank E. Kincart, the timber grafter, who admitted his own guilt and helped send Mr. Nickell to prison in the hope of escaping punishment himself, has voluntarily made the following affidavit : "In expectancy of immunity from 'my illegal acts, I pleaded guilty to said indictment, and at the trial I made statements and charges against Charles Nickell that were not in accordance with the facts; that I never had any con nection or conversation with the said Nickell in regard ' to the location of said timber lands and as far as I know he had no knowledge whatever of any illegal acts con nected therewith . Here is a case, perhaps one of many, where a man's freedom was deliberately sworn away by a cowardly scoun drel, who hoped thereby to escape his just deserts. Is there any wonder that little odium attaches to a land fraud con viction in Oregon? V ,-( Both Francis J. Heney, who prosecuted Mr. Nickell, ' and Federal Judge Hunt, before whom the case was tried, ' recommended a conditional pardon for Mr. Nickell, yet President Taft refused to sign it, though the largest par don petition ever sent from Oregon requested it. "THE GIRL FROM RECTOR'S." ' Good acting does not atone for bad plays. "The Girl From Rector's" is coarse, disgusting and un healthy. It is vicious. It is useless. "The Girl From Rector's" points no moral and adorns no tale. It is an unvarnished portrayal of degeneracy de veloped by the idle rich, without a redeeming feature. The play, though clever in spots, is not novel, the situations not new, and the plot vulgar in the extreme. There is always an undercurrent of slime beneath the placid waters of conventionalism, but because it is there, is poor excuse for parading it before the public, with its suggestiveness and its nastiness. The stage is a great educational force, but it is a pros titution of its power to whitewash puriency and paint vice in rainbow hues. A Bargain The famous 120-acre j. W. THOMAS GROVE FARM 85 acres of alfalfa garden, 20 acres of the prettiest oak anad laurel grove in the valley, 15 acres of apples and pears in bearing,, and loaded with fruit at the present time. This is the best proposition ever offered in Southern Oregon. See WHITE & TROWBRIDGE Exclusive Agents, for prices, terms, etc, at office, Phone 93 6 Fir street Medford own crimes. Urges Go'Operation of Fruit Growers THE California Fruit (1 rowers' Exchange is i co-operative organization which haa marketed for the, citrus growers of California oranges and lem ons amounting to $132,785,500 gms'.v, but . never declared a dividend or accumulated one penny in dividends to i ts stockholders. President of California Fruit The citrus fruit season of 1908-00 J is drawing sufficiently near to nu i end for us to make a comparatively close estimate of the number of boxes ! and returns for the sumo. According to the brief delivered to tho ways and means committee of the house of. representatives, by tho Citrus Pro-j tective league of Culiforniu, thure are about 120,000 acres of orange and lemon trees in bearing, and we esti mate this year's yield from all over the state will amount in round num bers to 14,500,000 boxes and the gross sales not far from $30,500, 000; deducting cost of freight und icing, at an average price of 95 cents per box, equaling $13,775,000, mak ing the net amount received in Cali fornia f. o. b. cars $22,875,000. The production per acre varies enormously all the way from next to nothing to 000 boxes. The average production for the season 1908-9 for the total number of acres in bearing in California, according, to above acreage, is about 120 boxes per acre. The yearly cash returns per acre va ries similarly to the yield and the variety of fruit grown, from next to nothing to from $1000 to $1100 per acre (the latter returns having been realized in some cases account heavy yield and high prices prevailing for some particular variety sold at the top price in some particular season). A very closely tabulated statement of returns on oranges sold by the exchange for the season of 190-1-5 (a season of rat AW low prices) show ed in general the following results. About one-third of nil the fruit sold showed a net loss to the growers. About one-third of the crop returned a new dollar fo'r an old one and the remaining one-third returned from a fair to a vcrv good profit. Orchardists Employ 150,000 Laborers There nre probably from ten to twelve thousands orchardists engag ed in the industry, and it supports nil told, including: laborers and their fam dies, about 150,000 people. The principal producing comities are Riverside, Los Angeles, San. Ber nardino. Tulare, Orange, Ventura and Santn Barbara. The principal distributors are the California Fruit Growers' exchange, the Rcdlunds Mutual Orange Distribu tors, the California Citrus union, the Xntiomil Orange company. Randolph Fruit company and the Rodlands as sociations, and probably the most noted simile growers nre C. C. Chap man of Fullcrton. F.. A. Chase of the Xational' Orange company and Mr. Xutlion W. Blnnchard of Santa Pau la. The approximate amount received by the citrus grower. in California from the time of the first shipment east is probably something over $250, 000,000. There is no doubt that the opening of the Panama canal will be of very material benefit lo the citrus grower, enabling him to put his fruit in nil eastern markets nt n much low er price and in belter condition, which means a largely increased consump tion, ner capita and will open to a certain extent foreign markets for our best fruit. . Our ideal climatic conditions .and the romance attending the growing of the orange and leninn has drawn into the ranks of the citrus grower many cultivated and bright business men from nil sections of the world, who have applied the same nervous energy nnd keen neumcn (which mode for them fortunes in other lines of bus iness or profession) to the successful growth nnd the marketing of tho orange and lemon. Growers Benefit Jiy Exchange. Thes first carload of oranges was shipped firom California in 1877, from what is known as (he "Wolfskill or chard," in Los Angeles, which were nil seedlings. Most of the plantings had been for domestic needs only, but with the completion of the Southern Pacific railway the growintr of or anges received a great, impetus which was accelerated by the high prices received after the ndvnt of Wash ington Xnvls on the market, and the completion .of the Santa Fo railway. For the first few years prices were very satisfactory, although very un By F.Q.STORY Growers' Exchange un d of Growers' even; somo growers receiving from 100 to 200 per cent more tlmn other growers for the sumo variety of fruit. Tu 1885 tho shipments amounted to about 1000 carloads, and the market ing conditions were all but unbeara ble. . At a meeting of the - growers throughout southern California held in Los Angeles, October 24, 1885, tho delegates by a formal resolution recognized tho fuct thut unless somo united action was taken for improv ed methods in tho sain of their fruit, they would soon lose their homo. They held sessions forenoons, afternoons nnd nights for several days, which resulted in the organization of the "Orange Growers' Protective union." Tho results for the first year were very advantageous, but after an ex istence of several ycurs the union wus finally hammered to pieces by commission men und . buyers, who were ublo to make larger profits by forcing the growers to sell their fruit singly. From the time the union dis solved to JStl.t tho growers were practically portioned out among the different private shipping firms, none of whom would invade the others territory. I he writer sold Ins seed lings in 1892 for 10c per box of 70 pounds on the trees, and the fruit cost not less limn 50c jier box to raise it. At this time and for one or more years previous, certain sections or districts had formed associations in n small way and were marketing their fruit through the officers of the associations. As a rule they re ceived' much better results than the individual shipper, which led them to believe that their beginning al though small cad weak, was along the right line. This step mnrks the commencement of co-operative mar keting of citrus fruits in California. T. H. B. Chamblin "Exchange Father" Through the work and agitation of TUB Chamblin, who is known as the "Father '.of the Kxehuiige," the various sections and shippers began to believe that u combination of their interests along co-operulivo lins would result in belter methods of handling and selling their fruit, and enable them to get better results. A mass- meeting of the growers was held at Los Angeles in the chamber of commerce August 29, 1893, the ex pressed purpose of the meeting being "to provide for the marketing of all the citrus fruit at the lowest possible cost under uniform methods ulid in n manner to secure to each grower a certain iiiiH'keting of his fruit und the full average price to he obtained in the market for the entire season." 'Following this, local arreciations .were .formed throughout the principal fruit districts on the basis that Un packing of the fruit would be done at cost, nnd the marketing done through tan executive committee composed of one member lrom each district. I ins arrangement continued through the seasons of 1894 nnd 1895 and, while not entirely satisfactory, gave much evidence to the growers us to con vince them they were marketing thier fruit along the right lines. October 24. 1895. the Southern California Fruit exchange was organized on u purely co-operative basis, with Mr. A. If. Xaftzger ns president. The growers organized first under the head of associations and all the associations of one. locality formed n subexchnnge, which had its president, secretary and bookeepers. Its honrd of directors was chosen from the representatives of its associations. The representatives of the subex- clinnge, now numbering fourteen, form the directory of the California Fruit Grower's Fxchango. "The associations tnko (he grentest possible care in the picking nnd the handling of fruit Ihnt it shall not suffer any mechanical injury (as upon this will depend the percentage of decay en route), to grade it to accurate sizes and to sort it ns to qualify with tho greatest core, nnd finally to pack it as tastefully and ns solidly ns they may without injury to the fruit, shipping it to such points as the sub-exchange directs, and here tho association's responsibility ends, though they moy take part in decid ing, if they so desire, not only as to Supply Company. the market it shall hn sent to, but have the final say us to tho sale of it. During the period of seventeen months, viz., from April 1, 1903, to August 1, 1904, tho Southern Califor nia' Fruit Exchange combined, its in terests in the sale of thier fruit with the principal non-exchange shipping iuteerests under the name of the Cal ifornia Fruit Agency. The net re sults obtained were not satisfactory to tho growers, and on September 1, 1904, "the exchange resumed the sale of the fruit it controlled. On Mured 27, 1105, the California Fruit Growers' Exchange was incornorutcd. and on September 1, following, succcded to inu Dusiness nt tho Niiitliern ( alitor nia Fruit Exchange. Tho California Fruit Growers' Ex change meets weekly ami its sessions nre very strenuous, cverv momhei- giving his best thought anil effort to the upbuilding of the exchange. The suhcx'cliuiigcs meet monthly or semi monthly. The associations usually meet less frequently. A copy of tho minutes of the meeting of the ex change irircctnruto is sent out tin same day to each one of its snbex cliani'es anil is rejut tit Ilia .li ... j ol the exchanges at thier first" meet ing thereafter. A copy of the min utes of each suliexcliiinges' meeting is sent lo each of its affiliating asso ciations, thus keeping every branch of the business in toiieh with each other. The head exchange has in spectors at all the principal division points along the main arteries of traffic this side of the Missouri river who make detailed dailv l'etMirf s showing the percentage of decay and general condition of each car nml ohur of leaving and any information or value in regard to the shipment. uwi uip -cr in Business The exchange has its own cipher code, which is carefully revised every year or two along lines of its own special business. Every district malinger daily telegraphs cither lo the Los Angeles, headipiartcrs or to the general eastern agency ntVhicago thier sales or offers on fruit and any other iiigfromation of interests to the Los Angeles sales managers or grow ers. These telegrams bckiu coming in, in cipher about 8 a. in. Those coming in early in the day are trans lated and telephoned to the various siibexchunges interested, and in some cases to tho associations. Two or three additional clerks begin woik nt 1 o'clock p. m. in deciphering these telegrams and it is Ihir duly to re main as laic as 12 o'clock at mid iiight in order to get all oft he reports MISFITTED LENSES ARE By my method 'errors of tho eye causing nerve strain nre ac curately measured, proper lenses proscribed, when headaches and oth er troubles disappear. It is u. well known fact that children in school classed as stupid have often bcenknown to make rapid progress after errors of this sort have boon corrected. 'Brief consultation free. DR. IVY M. ROBINSON, Eyesight Specialist, East Main St., Over Nicholson's Hardware. Medford. ASHLaND xo Swedenburg Block. Here Is a year's Work for you. An earnest nnd enthusiastic young man or woman can secure an excellent course of business training. Splendid rooms in tho Swedenburg block, individual instruction, in creased faculty. Everything up-to-date. Enter September (ilh nnd sccuro tho best, yenr's work of your life, including our full eourso in gymnasium work. ' P. RITNER. A. M., President. and telegrams translated and iniiiieo graphed in the morning bulletin, which goes out to the exchanges on the .'I a. in. paper Iriiius, so that on the following morning every hiibiix change and associations inn v know what was done on the previous day and virtually know the condition und the whereabouts of each uud every cur they are interested In. ''Dining the busy season tho ox change has from 1200 to 1500 oars ouch day, either on switch or roll ing, so that it is easy to realize that tho expense in keeping such close tab is very great, amounting in telegrams alone to from $500(1 to $7000 per mouth, during much of the season. The exchange has a separate pigeon hole to receive history curds of each brand or quality of fruit shipped by each of its associations, they being grouped together according to tho sub-exchanges to which I hey belong. Knell sub-exchange has separata pigeonholes for each brand or qual ity of fruit shipped by its affiliating associations. Each cur shipped bus' its own his tory curd, iimiii which is entered every particular of interest apper taining to that ear, date of shipment, the car number, the exchange and association number, whether under ice or not, by what line routed, tho variety of fruit, the number of boxes and the size in each, and all oilier matters of special interest at dale of shipment, and each morning as tka bulletins referred lo above aro re ceived, the additional information therein contained is transferred in thai cur's special card, so that in a moments time the manager of the ex change or anv snb-exchiinges can re fer lo any particular car, tell very closely where it is at that moment and its full history lis lo sale, diversion nnd to condition, upcuruncc, decay, etc. This is a matter of iiicaleiilnblo benefit in handling the cars to tho best advantage and enabling the ex change bv their right of diversion In j keep every market in the country evenly supplied. Not withstanding all this minute care and expense, the business is sn large that the average expense of selling each box is seven cents. 1909 Citrus Sale? Immense. A ose estimate of this year's bus iness ending August 31, by the Cal ifornia Fruit Growers' Exchange will how the following results: total mlo of oranges, 19,000 carloads, of lemons 14.000 carloads; lotiil gross salec reaching $22,(100,000, netting f. o. b. California, $1 1.300.000. As illustrative of close lab kept by tho officials 'of the exchange on all its business, its gross sales for Die three years preceding the present one omoiinting to $51,442.1(18.01, there was a loss from bail debts of only $301.45, and on the basis of five per j cent for guaranteeing sales formerly charged by the fruit commission men this would show a saving lo the ex change growers of $2,571,7111.98. "One of the great advantages to the grower in joining the exchange ii (Continued on Dago 8.) DEAR AT ANY PRICE. L