THE MEDFORD DAILY TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, OREO ON, WEDNESDAY, OOTODKR (5, 100!) uttitaal PApo.!' ol lue uy 01 lUemoru. LADIES! Mi'l'iirc vim buy yiuir full font wear, sci mil' cli'tiiiii) display. It is iiniisiinl to I'iinl wo rum pled' n siurk outside o' llii' big sty li- renters. AVo lire sliowiiitf tlie Kiinic styles ns Portland niul Sun I'Vanrisro stores at prires way under theirs. I NOTHIXd OLD IX PITH KTORK.hu there is no elianee of your gelling oiit-pf-diirp I footwear. Edrheades Bros. THE WEST SIDE SHOE STORE 1 i Published every evening except Sunday. MEDFORD PUBLISHING COMPANY George Putxam, Editor and Manager. Admitted as Second-Class Matter in the Postoffiee at Medford, Oregon. SUBSCRIPTION RATES : One year, by mail . .$5.00Ono month by uuiil or carrier. .$0.")0 The Tribune is for sale by Hotel T riuid Nows Stand, Poliuld, Or.; Ferry News Ftnnd. Sun Frnno'soo. Cnl. MEDFORD PEARS StfASll RECORDS. Again Medford peal's are smashing all records, prov ing once more that the Rogue River valley is the premier pear district of the world. Bartlett peal's have netted growers in the Medford dis trict as high, as $1500 an acre. D'Anjou and Cornice will net more, while Aose, Howells and Winter. Nelis profits are equally as large. , The Barlctt Season. ; The Bartlett pear season for Medford opened August 24, when a car of fruit from the Burrell orchard sold for $3 25 a box in Chicago, and closed September 29, when the last car from the same orchard sold for $4.25 a box in New York citj Approximate!)- 125 cars of Bartletts were shipped and an average price f. o. b. Medford of from $2.25 to $2.30 a box was received! ' ' , 'Wherever offered in competition with Bartletts from California, Washington, Idaho, Hood River or otlyr sec tions, Medford Bartletts topped the market. -' The reasons why such high prices are secured every year for Medford Bartletts is because they reach the east ern markets just as the season ends for California and oth er fruit and before the Atlantic coast product floods the market, and because of "fancy quality and perfect pack. In size, flavor and keeping qualitiy, the Ro'gud River pear has no equal. As Sgobel & Day, the New York commission men, say, "Medford Bartletts are perfectly beautiful and surpass all others." : , D'Anjou Pears. ; The Medford d'Anjqu pear season opened October 1 in New York city, when, a car from the George Marshall orchard sold at an average of $5.45 a box or $2700 gross for the car. This is a net price to the grower of $4.12 a box. In this car, 46 boxes sold at $6.75 a box, and 254 boxes i $6.00 a box. sHBtV:) ? 333 tVJtH i. A second ear of d'Ahjous sold October 5 in New York for $2900, an average of $545 a box. These were from the Bear Creek orchard. AH told a dozen cars of d'Anjous have been shipped. The d'Anjou is a magnificent pear and, like all other varieties, reaches perf eetionln the Rogue River valley. It can be grown in but few localities, but one car being shipped from Colorado this year, which averaged $4.75 a box. The Howell Pears. Approximately ten cars of Howell pears have beenj shipped from the Rogue River valley this season. The 'I'll., I I ill.. i. I . 1 , 1 1 ... xjiv iiun-ifM omiaru snipped iwo ears, wiiirli were sold m Chicago at $:i. !0 a box. Returns are nut all in on other shipments, but an average of from $2 to $2.25 has been netted by growers. Returns on Aeurre Rose pears have not been reeeivd. Whiter Xelis Penes, Picking of Winter Xelis pears is under way now. Probably oO ears will bo shipped from the valley. Except for those who have sold their entire 'crop in advance, it is impossible to quote figures. Fred II. Hopkins has sold his entire output from lti 1-2 acres from the Snowy Butte orchard at Central Point, es timated at 7000 boxes, for $3.12 f. o. b. New York, or $2.14 net f. o. b. orchard. This is in round figures $15,000. There have already been sold from this same tract $2000 worth of Bartletts and fall butter pears. The 161-2 acres of pears will net Mr. Hopkins $17,00.0, better than $1000 an acre. Hie same block of pears netted him jjs 19,000 in 1907. : Com ice Pears. The Doy Du Cornice pear, the rarest, choicest, finest pear in the world, and incidentally the highest priced, grows to perfection in the Rtgue River valley. Close to a dozen cars have been shipped, but returns have not yet been received. California Cornice have grossed $;i:!0S a car this season, and as Medford Cornice always bring a higher figure, fancy prices are expected. Senator Jonathan Bourne set the ball rolling last week. when he paid $9 a box for 60 boxes of Cornice from the Bear Creek orchard to be sent as presents to the diplomatic corps at ashiugton. Last vear Medford Cornice pears sold a high as $10.08 a box in London and in 1907 as high as $9.40 a box in New York, while a carload grossed $4622.80 or $8.10 a box, the green fruit record of the world. Fruit. buvers all admit that there is an increasing de mand for fancy fruit at fancy prices,, and the sections pro ducing it are so limited in area that there is no danger of over-production. Despite the increased orchard area of the northwest, there is an annual decrease in the fruit out put of the United States, and more orchards are yearly abandoned in the east and central west than are planted in the northwest. Pear districts are few and the demand reat. .'. . Rings Rings Rings All Kinds All Sizes ' at Martin J. Reddy THE JEWELER Near P. O. Old Mali Box. Among tlu tn-tiniren hold by tbo Antiquarian society lu l'urtHiiiuutl). N. II.. there. mi old box tlio history of which In given, iid a label which It bears. Tfio box Is or tin. painted green, nml shown signs of nulrb usage, which' Is not surprising when cne con siders Hint It curried the United States ninll between l'ortsmoutb and llostoa during the Revolution. It Is about nine Inches (ong. four and a bnlf Incbcs wlili- rfirJ a little more tbun tbat Id bright. It was carried on horseback by Captain John Noble. otherwise 'known ns Deaceo Nobis. wbo wai post rider until 1(13. TbU box contained all tbe mall anA made every week one round trip, occupying three days In tbe Journey from forts, moutb to Boston tbe Drat of tbe week and three days at tbe end of tbe week from Boston to l'ortsmoutb. Tbe dis tance between tbe two places la a lit tle more tbao fifty miles. He Knew No Fear. Prince Metternlcb was driving In Vienna ono day during tbe congress of 1815 when tbe bones bolted, tbe car riage was overturned and Metternlcb was thrown Into tbe roadway. Flndkbg be bnd no bones brokon, be picked him self up and walked quietly away. Tbe same evening be met tbe king of Na ples, wbo bad seen tbe accident "How horribly frightened you must bare been." snld tbe king. "Mot at all." answered Metternlcb. "It Is no merit of mine, but I am con stitutionally Inaccessible io fear." "It Is as I thought." replied tbe king. "You are a supernatural being." PLANT BAROMETERS. The Dandelion. Clowor Lsavss and th Scarltt Pimptrnil. The damleliiin li a dandy luiroineler. one of tin i-uiiiMiiiiii'M iiiiiS must rell.i. bio. It In when I he blooms hnve seed ed and nre In the Hurry, fentliery con (1 1 1 Inn that the wenther prophet fneul ties coijje tu I ho tore. In Due weather the ball extend to the full, but when rnlu iipproni'lies It shuts like an um brella. If I he wenther is Inclined to be showery It keeps shut all the time, only opening when the danger from tbe wet I punt, suys the Chicago Trib une. Tbe ordinary clover and all Its va rieties. Including the trefoil and the shamrock, aro also barometers. When rain Is coming tbe leaves shut together like tbe shells of an oyster snd do not open again until One weather is. as sured. Kor a day or two before rain comes tbelr sterna swell to an ap preciable extent and stiffen so that tbs leaves are borne more upright than usual. This stem swelling when rain Is expected Is a feature of many flow ering grnsses. Tbe. Angers of wblcb the leaves of the horse chestnut are made up keep tint and fnnllko so long as fine weath er Is likely to continue. With the com ing of rnln. however, they droop aa If to offer less reslNtnnee to the weather. Tbe scarlet . pimpernel Is nicknamed tho "pour mnns weather glass" or wind cope nml opens Its Rowers only to lino wenther. As soon as rnln Is In the nlr II shut up nml rniniilns closed until the shower or storm Is over. IE TIME SINCE THE FALL RAINS HAVE BEGUN, AS YOU CAN EASILY LOClTE THE LEAKS IN THE ROOF , To Use "Mikado Rubber Roofing" or Star "A" Star Shingles IT DEPENDS ALTOGETHER ON THE iTIME YOU HAVE AT YOUR DISPOSAL AS TO WHICH YOU SHOULD USE, AS IT IS IMPOSSIBLE TO GET ANYTHING BETTER OR EVEN '"JUST AS GOOD." 1Sm oods ber Comov 1 a