THE MEDFORD DAILY TRIBUNE, MED FORD, OREGON. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 20. 1000. Medford Daily Tribune Official Paper of the City of Medford. Published every evening except Sunday. MEDFORD PUBLISHING COMPANY George Putnam, Editor and Mauager. Admitted as Second-Class Matter in the Postof f ice at Medford, Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES : One year, by mail $5.00Ono month by mail or carrier. .$0.;"0 The Tribune :s for snle by Hotel Portland News Stand, Portland; Or.; Ferry News Etnnd, San Francisco, Cnl. southern California, with Crater Lake and other unsur passed seenic attractions, witli its wide-awake, progressive citizenship and its' metropolitan characteristics, Medford gives every promise of becoming the second city in Oregon, the metropolis of that vast tributary region lying between Portland and Sacramento. CURTIS WRITES OF HOOD RIVER MEDFORD 'S BRIGHT FUTURE. It is estimated that two million and a quarter dollars have been spent in building materials in Medford during the past year in business blocks and dwellings. Both bus iness houses and residences are of a better class than pre viously erected- This estimate does not include an additional half mil- , lion dollars spent on water works, sewer systems, street paving and other public improvements. It does not in clude still another half million now being spent in con structing the Pacific & Eastern railroad. In 1908 more cars of commodities were shipped into Medford than into any other cit y in Oregon outside of j Portland. The Southern Pacific did a greater passenger and freight business at Medford than at any other station. Already the railroad traffic record for 190S has been passed, and when its many hundred cars of fruit exports are considered, Modford ranks as the banner traffic sta tion of the Harriman lines in Oregon, barring only the metropolis. More miles of streets have beeii paved with first-class pavement and more miles of cement walks built, more miles of water mains laid, and more miles of sewers con structed in Medford in the past 12 months than any eityof its size in the northwest, and probably in the United States. Medford, in the center of 50,000 acres of planted or chards, is the banner fruit city of Oregon. From the 'Rogue River valley, between 800 and 900 cars of fruit will be shipped this year, and but a fraction of the acreage is in bearing. More cars of pears are shipped than the rest of the northwest produces, and the fruit sells at the high est prices in the' world's markets. Over a hundred cars of Bartletts have been shipped from Medford this year, net ting the growers an average of $2 a box, or approximately $1,200,000, and Bartletts are but one of many varieties that grow to perfection. . Several hundred men are rushing the construction of the Pacific & Eastern, recently purchased by John R. Allen of New . York, to the Butte Falls timber belt, with excel lent prospects of the railroad's extension to the Klamath country to meet the new Hill Central Oregon line on the east and to the Blue Ledge mine on the southwest, with later an extension to the coast. Eight billion feet of tim ber, half of it sugar and white pine, will be made available for manufacture hy the Pacific & Eastern before spring, supplying work for hundreds of men. At the very doors of Medford lies the greatest coal field in Oregon. The coal is of an excellent commercial quality.' Development, Avhich. stopped a few months ago through disagreement among owners, will probably be shortly resumed, as there is every probability that reorgan- ization will be effected at an early date and the coal prop erties amply financed, insuring a large payroll. A million and a half dollars are deposited in the local banks. Postal receipts, which five years ago totaled $5000, will exceed $20,000 this year. In every line of industry, similar growth is shown, and in spite of improvements made, building does not keep pace with the demand. There is not a vacant storeroom nor a vacant house in town and has not been for months. , There has been no boom in Medford just a steady ,five years' growth. 'Conservatism has ruled investment and the city lags behind its tributary country in develop ment. With'' the resumption of work in the Blue Ledge copper district, in the coal mines and in the timber belt, payrolls essential to the growth of any city will be pro vided and Medford will advance by leaps and bounds. J At no tjmc in its history has the future been so bright for Medford. With its great natural resources being de veloped, with its orchard area, already the greatest of any region in the northwest, being extended at the rate of 10,000 acres a year, with its fruit commanding higher prices than those of any other district in the world, with its superior climatic condition, excelling even those of Correspondent Chicago Record-Herald Tells of Marvels of Hood River Orchards. (By William E. Curtis, Special Cor respondence of the Chicago Hecord Herald.) HOOD RIVER, Or., Sept. 12. The apples from Hood River valley are worth more than oranges "in the wholesale markets of the world, and sell at about the same prices as pine apples. About 250,000 crates are furnished from this valley annually, and most of them are sold on the trees before they are picked, and are shipped direct to Europe, where the consumers are willing to pay liver prices for apples than the people of the United States. one gentleman expressed it, you havo to cultivate your strawberry beds with a fine tooth comb. The profits of apple orchards have been quite as large and in some cases' even larger. The books of the Hood River Apple Growers' union and oth- j er organizations are open to tho in- i speelion of those who are interested in the subject, and Leslie lluller of the bunking, firm of lluller & Co., who is the first citir.cn of Hood Hiv- ; er, and well known throughout Ore gon, will vouch for their accuracy. I The tales that are told about the' profits from apple trees are so in-i credible that the Commercial club, I the Apple Growers' union mid the! various fruit companies givo tho names of the men in eAch instance. : For example, E. H. Shephard in 1007 mardo a net profit of more than $000 an acre from his orchard of 102 1 acres; Lmlwig Struck sold his crop: from an orchard of three acres for: $11258; A. I. Mason sold his crop from three nnd n half acres for $2502; F. Eggert sold his crop from an or chard of l.i acres for $8500, and , ,.., ...,. I,., , ;...i.. linitelv. There are tastes and a fashion for. There are frequent failures, but apples as for everything else, tier mans want red apples, am will pay a mark apiece for Spitzcniiercs from Hood River. The English like a yel low apple and will pay a shilling for a Newtown pippin from Hood River. You will hear people from other parts of the country say that better apples are raised in. Vermont and New York. Other towns in Oregon, Wahing ton nnd Idaho insist that their fruit is just as good as any that is grown in Hood River valley, and that may be true, but nevertheless, the epi cures of Europe arc willing to pay the top prices for apples from Hood River nnd the people out here are trying to furnish them as many as possible. The industry is comparatively new. The" oldest orchards were planted about 25 years ago; the apples be came popular on the market about 18 years ago; they became famous ten years ago; and since the Portland exposition everybody in the world knows about them. It takes five years to develop an orchard, and the entire vnlley is being planted with trees. About two-thirds of the avail able acreage has been taken np al ready. . According' to an official report compiled at the state agricultural college there were 340.435 trees in bearing last year, of which 174.648 were New to-.vn pip; Spit- zenbe s, .71" -?nche and 4527 cherry trees. At least 82 per cent of these trees have been planted within the last six years, nnd when they' ore all bearing they will produce at least 1,000,000 boxes i year. It is estimated that the nn nual crop ten years from now will be 2.000,000 boxes nnd when you know that these apples sell for an average price of .$2.50 a box on the tree, you can have some appreciation of the value of the industry. The cash value of last year's cron was some thing over $750.oT?0. and that mon ey came into the hands of a few men. ' While the young trees are growing it is customary to plant strawber ries between the rows, and Inst year there were 750 acres which produced an average of 175 crates of Clark's seedlings per acre, which sold as high as $3.35 a crate. The people of Hood River boast that their straw berries have never suffered the ig nominy of going to a cannery, and of the 00,000 crates which have been shipped, from this town in a single season every basket has been sold for the table at the top prices, often as high as $1 a crate. The straw berries arc large and firm and have been shipped ns far as Hongkong in one direction and London in the oth er without decay. It is asserted that the average cost of cultivating Clark's seedlings is $20 an ncre, and that the average net profits derived from the 750 acres in this valley will range from $150 to $250 tin acre. Some strawberry growers have made as high ns $350 an acre, but every man is not so for tunate. It requires intelligence, hard work nnd the highest degree of pa- thev are the fault of the man and not of the trees. No fool can make money in apple'growing here or cl-e- where, and the size and value of the crop depends entirely upon the man ner in which it is planted and cul tivated. In driving ubout 1 1 1 valley you will see orchards of ragged trees Jui t haven't been trimmed for year-, some of the limbs will be drooping to the earth under the weight of ap ples, and the ground will be covered with weeds and various' forms of un dergrowth. The next orchard will be neatly trimmed; the soil will be n bare and as fine as the lu-t of an Oregon roadway, and you will be told that about half of the apples have been picked off while they were green. When ripening time comes the expert will tell you the clean and i neat orchard will produce a crop of; Iperfeet fruit of high flavor that will j sell for the maximum price. There will not be so many apples as in the j neglected orchard, but they will be j worth three or four times ns much. ; BIG CROWDS AT E SALE Wonderful Display of Furniture Shown and Prices Are Right. If you arc li Medford booster and want the cockles of your heart warm ed by hearing unsolicited praise for Medford nnd her progressive mer cantile establishments you should mix with the crowd that throng the magnificent store of the Weeks & McGownn Furniture Co. or stand with them in front of their immense display windows and hear such re marks as "Hid you ever sec such a splendid line of furniture outside of Portland or , San FrnnciscoT" or "Look at the price on that beautiful bed. I really can't see how'thcy enn sell them so cheaply.' I was going to Portland to select furnishings for our htfme but I am sure I can get things cheaper here." Such remnrks but lend to show the interest, Weeks & Go wan company have aroused in their gigantic snle of the finest line of furniture ever seen in southern Ore gon, in tact everything considered they can place the stock on their 15,000 feet of floor space alongside that of the finest in Portland and not suffer by comparison as not only the moderate price stock usually found in furniture stores is seen here j but also that which cannot fail to satisfy the most, critical taste in such woods as mahogany, walnut, birds- eye maple, etc. ' Not only are the crowds unstinted in their praise of the store nnd its stock but are taking advantage of the many bargains offered in a man ner that most emphatically bears out thovontciition of Mr. Dawson, the salesman in charge, thnt tho nennlo of southern Oregon know tience. to make this money, and, ns when they see it. THE ETERNAL QUESTION How Many Trips Over the Washboard? THAT question worries you when your nicer things begin to show the wear and tear of rubbing. But rubbing is bound to be hard on clothes it wears away the board in a year I Throw away your washboard! Treat your clothes right! Try the CoHeld Power Washer. It washes entirely without rubbing. No irritation washboard inside, like other machines. Nothing to wear or tear your clothes. Pays fr itself many times over by the saving on the clothes. Let us put it in your home and do your washing for you. Examine it. Examine its work. You won't let us take it back after that. City water runs it while you rinse and hang out. If you are still doing your washing by hand, wast ing your energy and strength, or are using one of the old style washing machines, we would suggest that you call at once and inspect Coffield Power Washer You will find a pretty good cut of it in this ad, but it does not show the beauty and simplicity of the mo tor which operates the machine- No Labor on Youf Part It washes while you rinse and hang out, and the expense is less than 5 cents a week. Sent on free trial if desired. Medford Hardware Co.