i MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, LEDFORD, OREGON, MONDAY, MAY 2. 1910. Medford Mail TRrouNE Complcto Bcrlcs: Tlitrty-ninth Year; Bally, Fifth Ycnr. PUBLISHED DAILY EXCEPT SATUR DAY BY THE MDDrOBD rBINTXNO 00. A consolidation of tho Mcilfonl Mall, established 1889: tho Southern Ore Rontan, established 100J; the Democratic Times, established 1SJ2; tho Ashland Tribune, established JS36, nnl tho Med ford Tribune, oslnbllshed 1906. OEOndn PUTNAM. Editor nnd Manager Entered ns second-class matter No vember 1, 1900, nt the nostorflce at Medford, Oregon, under tho act of March 3, 1879. Official lapT of t)9 Clt.v of Madford. BunscntrriON rates. Ono ypfir by mall Dun mimth liv mall l'er month, tfoUvpral by errlr, In Medford, Ashlnnd, Jacksonville, Talent. Phoenix, Lent ml Point, rs,l,l nn.l Wnodvllle Sunday only, by mall, pr year... 2.00 Weekly, one year 1.50 rull Leased Wire United Press Dispatcher $5.00 6U .SO Tho Mall Trlbuno la on sale at the Ferrv News Stand. San Francisco. Portland llotol News Stand, Portland. Bowman News Co., Portland. Or. "W. O. Whitney, Seattle, Wash. Hotel Spokane News Stand. Spokane. Postage Sates. S to 12-paEO paper 12 to 24-phk paper 24 to 6-pKe paper. ,...lc ....to . . . .30 NO OVERPRODUCTION POSSIBLE. (From J. C. Wnlllno's History of Southern Orcflon.) Apple growing in tho Pacific northwest is at tho same stage of development that citrus fruit raising was in southern California a quarter of a century ago. Then Cal ifornia supplied but a small percentage of the oranges and lemons consumed in America, yet there was talk of over production. Today it yields thirty times the output of that date and the increased production does not keep pace with the demand. Wliat lias Happened m uautornia to tne citrus inuusiry . , . ; . , ui,nt oo.n.nuu.ty. will nlsn Imimnn in tho north wnst. to thn rmnlo industrv. i of Sim nlliP nv nllnr l.'ina nlinlit llui As 1'OgUrds tllO Ol'lglll of -nw rtirt n. r H.Jbodw !tnbo, o"1' conjecture fact that the United States must look to the northwest for INDIAN WARS OF SOUTHERN OREGON As to clothing, the Untptiuus wore, tho on'vly Jews, whoso migrations, not in nnv wr.v peculiar. Tho moi -hooosh in war niul lovo of barter woro no oovorh.g in fair o- warnJ)W, l"m$ w,"t! f Wuicu weather, but Jn severe seasons adopt- I " .poiuiliiinli.m. o.l n garment made of tho skins of ot ' 10 IvIIokUiitH yl to nui.nnls. Females woro a skirt f ! " lrl ot Doug a- cedar fibres fastened around tlio "-. 'here they own ami nil ,....! ii..,....: i... i, i luritts, and nro useful members of its apples. Here only do favorable natural conditions ex ist, rendering a safe and sure income from the investment possible. Oregon today produces but an infiuitismal portion of the apples consumed in the United States. The apples OWORW CIBCUUVTIOH. Average Dally for November, 190lt..... 1.700 December, 1903 1.S4? January. 1910 1.923 February, 1910 2,122 APRIL CXBCVX.ATIOXT. 1... 2,300 IT 2,375 3.. 1 2,350 IS 2.325 4 2,300 19 2,323 G 2.300 20 2.325 6 2.300 21 2,325 7 2,300 22 2.325 5 2.300 24 2,400 10 .2.. 2,350 25 2.350 11 2,300 26. .V 2,450 12 2.300 27 2.350 13 2,300 2S 2.350 14 2,300 29 2,350 15 2,325 Total ........5S,S25 Less deductions 300 57.525 Average net dally. 2.301. STATE OF OREGON, County of Jack son, 85. On this 30th day of April. 1910, personally aopeared before me. G. Put nam, mnnager of tho Medford Mall Tri bune, who, upon oath, acknowledge. that tne above xigures are true ana correct fSean II. N. YOCKEY. Xotary Public for Oregon. MEDrORD, OREGON. Metropolis of Southern Oregon and ivortnorn caiuornia anu lasiesi-gruw lnp city In Oregon. Population. May. 1910. 9.000. Hunk denoslts. S2.500.000. Banner fruit city of oregon Roguo River apples won sweepsiaKes prize anu title of Apple King of the World" at National Apple Show, Spokane. 1909. Rogue River pears brought lightest prices In all markets of the world dur ing the past five years. Write Commercial Club, enclosing cents for postage on finest community pamphlet ever written. Good mines, but baJ roads, exist throughout southern Oregon. Grants Pas3 s to have z local min strel Bhow. The peop-e ha,ve Med ford's sympathy. The Central Point hotol Is being rehabilitated and refurnished, which Is yood news to travelers. All northwestern states report a banner applo crop, which vith high prices Insures prosperity another year. Hog3 are selling for higher prices In Medford than In Portland or the east. They ere becoming as valuable as Comlco pears, Government labor exchanges In Great Britain have proven a great success, flndinG employment for near ly 1000 people a day. Any'solution of the vgiter problem made by tho council will be satisfac tory to tho people of Medford so long as they settlo It. The city's now hill reservoir is be ing filled with water for tho first time. It insures tho fire protection liffordcd any city In tho, la d. "Weston, tho aged pedestrian, his completed his walk from Los Angeles to New York city in 78 days, which is going somo for a man of 71. In a printed card of regulations for Information issued by the Wells, Far go Express company in tho early fif ties, tho last regulation read: "This company will not bo responsible for any loss or damage occasioned by fire, tho acts of God, or of Indians or any other public enemies of tho government." Hecauso i. pugilist was killed in a fight, there is popular agitation against tho Jeffries-Johncon fight In California. Pugilism la a survival of tho barbaric Instincts that exist in p.U humanity. Most all condemn tho sport, but moat all HUo to see It. Peo ple aro killed daily In auto races, In football, baseball, swimming or some of tho other sports. Vby make an exception to the ring? Grants Pass papers aro carrying their Jealousy of Medford and Ash land to an absurd length when they garblo tho report of tho geological survey to read as follows: "Tho val ley lands In the vicinity of Grants Pass along Boar creek aro particu larly adaptod to fruit culturo, and tho Roguo Itlver vallor has becomo Justly famous for tho excollont qual ity of apples, pears and other fruits raised thoro." l-'ieli formed a staple article of diet with the Unipquas, salmon ami salmon trout boitic tho principal va rieties, which woro, anil 8till arc abundant in tho Uinpquu river and its tributaries duriiiK certain soanons. Tho fish, bciiiK caught in soiae ap proved Indian fashion, was roasted before fires. Heine cut into eou- briug fanev prices in a few markets. Most of the people foment sized portions it was impaled Ul l'"l'ivo Viiov ua- uuauiu.umtu i"-" I-"- " j tliroitKll With Splinters to piOVCIlt it It is regarded as a luxurv. Each vear sees the output in-! from fniiinj; to pieces. Thus broiled creased and in the course of a few vears Oregon will leadlu, f"h. snhmm "f " tof , . . , , n vori welcome and toothsome addi- all States lU apple production. tion to their limited cuisine. The apple industrv, like the orange industrv, will have: i" times before tho coming of the its ups and downs. But it is rapidly reaching the stage ihml frenuout wnr8 wilh le Vmmm of an absolutely safe investment, through the organiza- but finally, through mutual interest. fir,! fl,r nn.nv,lirn nvnln,, .l,,'.li o,d?n0 flin .nv. effected ft COIlUtion. Fromtllis Keung niacumery necessarv to Handle tne product at a bejrnn to wane, in the deuuie end profit to the grower. Americans are rapidly becoming a fruit-eating nation. It is not so very long since the orange was considered a luxury, and this is true much more recently of grapefruit. Xow they are common articles of diet. Many have ex pressed the o)inion that apples should be so common aud low-priced articles of -food as bread and butter, eggs and milk. Jlowever, these have at times almost becomo luxu ries in recent vears. thoio hand, topic of a iti in 1S50, tho Kliekitats. n power ful and restloss tribe from beyond tho Columbia, entered the- Unipqun valley, having conquorod nil tho In dians whom they met in tho Will amette Valley, and subjected the Umpquas nlso to defeat. They oc cupied n portion of the lat tor's coun try and became- the dominant tribe northward of the Rokuo rivor valley. The Kliekitats were nnnnllv rn. jnowned in trndo and war, nnd their erviees were in renuost bv the wbilos Although the domestic and foreign demand for these nt various times when the other friiirc line innvnnood cfi.niirnlv niifrh flm i.n,li,nf! fitnbos were to be foutrlit. In 1S")1 , g . WW the apple has steadily decreased. The apple crop for 1909, reported to be less than 23,000,000 barrels, for example, sixty Klickitat warriors, well mount ed and nnned, offered themiolve to assist in tho war against tho t r t...L it. . was only slightly in excess of one-third of that for the years Ztl' Smiia'r toP , io the Des Chutes, a smnll but active tribe, who, under their chief, Scm-tes-tis, mado expeditions for pur poses of war or barter from their homes cast of the Cascades ns far ns Yreka, whore, in 1S5-1, they as sisted tho white: against the Shastns. In somo of their characteristics the Kliekitats irresistibly bring to mind 1896 and 1900, and much less than the crop for 1905, when the production reached a low figure. Statistics gathered by commercial organizations show that the annual production of apples in the United States is becoming less in proportion to consumption each year, and has actually been less in the aggregate the last few years than formerly. The figures since 1895 follow: Year. Barrels". 1S95 s " 60,453,000 1896 , 69,070,000 1897 41,536,000 1898 2S,570,000 1899 58,466,000 1900 ...56,820,000 1901 : 26,970,000 1902 .46,625,000 1903 :.: 46,626,000 1904 45,360,000 1905 24,310,000 . 1906 38,280,000 1907 , 29,540,000 1908 25,450,000 1909 22,735,000 Authorities on the subject of apple cultivation declare that overproduction is out of the question, saying among other things: "Our highest grade of American apples cannot be du plicated on the face of the earth, so we have the world for a market for our best apples. Our railroads and steam ship lines are ready and glad to take our fruits to the ends of the earth. The person then who looks for this business to speedily become unprofitable does not understand the situation. The 'calamity howler' may, scare some people, but not the intelligent fruit grower who understands the situation. "If the business of apple growing should be overdone in the United States, it by no means follows that the in telligent and careful fruit grower in the Pacific states would be out of a profitable business. The evidence mul tiplies on every hand that a grade of apples is raised on the Pacific slope, especially in the arid and semi-arid sec tions, that cannot be duplicated anywhere." Professor H. E. Van Deman, a noted pomologist and judge of the first exhibits at Buffalo, Portland and James town and in Spokane during the second National Apple show last November, on being asked what could be put into the soil to give apples the best color, replied that it is not so much what is in the soil as what is overhead. ' ' Sun light is the chief factor in giving color and quality to ap 7 ies," he added, "and on the Pacific slope, in Washington, OregonIdaho and Montana conditions exist in this re spect that cannot be found elsewhere in the world." As no spot in the northwest has as much sunshine as the Rogue River valley, and as none of them have such cli matic advantages and none produce a more perfect apnlc, there is no reason for fearing that apple culture in this limited area will ever be overdone. tnbes, only conjecture is nt Not onough in known on that to serve for the foundation respectable hypothesis, although tho common origin of all North American tribes has been taken for granted. Prom facts which have oonio under his notice, Judge Kosvborough, for-1 inetly Indian agent in Northern Call-1 fomin, is of tho opinion that there j have boon three lines of aboriginal migration southward through South-j orn Oregon nnd Northern California,' nnnlely, ono by tho coast, disporting townrd the interior; secondly, thai nlong tho Willamette Valley, oroasing the Calapooia mountains and tb Uinpqun and Roguo llivors, ShnMu and Scott valleys; the other wave coining up the PesChutes river and peopling the vicinity of the lake. As nn evidence of tho second move ment it is known that nil tho tribes inhabiting the region referred to spoke the same language and eou federated against their neighbors, particularly tho Pit Itivcr Indians, who nrrosted their course In the .south. The traditions o&the Shastas show they had driven n tribe out of their habitation and occupied it them selves. Tho Klnumthg have boon known among thomselvos nnd surrounding tribes as Muck-n-lueks, Klamath, Klnmcts, Lunnini (their own name) nnd Tlamath. The Roguo River, according to various authorities, called themselves Lo-to-ten, Tutata my. Totutime, Tootouni, Tootooton, Tutoteu, Tototin, Tutotutua, and Too-toot-ua; nil of which may be regarded ns tho same word, uttered variously by individuals of different tribes, and reproduced in writing as variously. For the purposes of this history their ordinary designation, Roguo River, will bo adopted, inas much ns they have attained a celeb rity under that nnmc, and as it in consequence convoys n readier moan ing than either of tho native words the use of which, in addition, carries a suspicion of pedantry. Tribal des ignations among tho Indians, It is to bo observed, woro nnd nro .exceed ingly indefinite and troublesome to (ho Student. For example: Tribes of restricted numbers frequently call themselves by' the nanie of their head chief; nnd' tho tribal name Is froquoutly used Indifferently with that of the chief. The Klainaths, for a time called themselves, nnd were called by their white neighbors, l.n t.akos. Their principal chief nlso bore thai name, and by it was known to a large part of tho state. The uaiuo, beyond doubt, is I, u-luo, moan ing, in French, tho Lake, nnd was applied to the great Klumnth hikes, upon whoso shores these people dwelt. Adopted by the natives, tills foreign word was applied to tho tribo nnd to the great peace chief, who became in his day tho most eminent of his race. The habit of loosely ap plying their designations has made tho study of Indian traditions nnd history very difficult indeed, and is probably tho most fruitful source of orror which presents Itself in tho pur suit of uborlgtnnl archaeology. (To llu Continued.) Nonrlly Klllss Former Wife. HKDIjANDS, Cul., May !!. Mm. M. Fourben is In a local hospital today Buffering from a fracture of tho skull, and tho body of David l)a vios, her former husband, who in flicted tho Injury, is nt tho city morgue. Davles shot himself through tho head after ho hud attacked Mrs. Fmirbon, beating her bond with tho butt of a revolver. Mrs. Fourben divorced Dnvles sovon years ago. Her refusal to re marry him Is believed to have been tho enuso of tho tragedy. At tho hospital, it Is said, Mrs. Fourben probably will recover. How to got work that yon really know how to do- is huportriit. HaskluM for Health. COLONISTS RATES T0 OREGON ihe GREAT NORTHWEST Tho management of tho Southern Pacific Co. (Lines in Oregon) takes great pleasure in an nouncing that the low rates from Eastern cit ies, which have done so much in past seasons to stimulate travel to and settlement in Ore gon, will prevail again this Spring DAILY from March 1 to April 15, inclusive. PEOPLE OF OREGON The railroads have done their part; now it's up to you. The colonist rate is the greatest of all home-builders. Do all you can to let east ern people know about it, and encourage them to como here, where land is cheap and home-building easy and attractive. FARES CAN BE PREPAID at homo if desired. Any agent of the road named is authorized to receive tho required deposit and telegraph ticket to any point in the East. REMEMBER THE RATES From Chicago, $33; from St. Louis, $32; from Omaha and Kansas City, 25. This reduction is proportionate from all other cities. Vm, McMTJRRAY, General Paasonger Agent Portland, Oregon The Pasadena of Oregon r1 t. : 't People of refinement; people with means; rotircd business men; professional men; college and university graduates, are coming to the. Rogue River Valley by tho score. Within the past two years almost a hundred Chicago and Evanston, Illinois, peoplo have purchased homes near Medofrd, and nearly every one of them has a friend or two whom they hope to induce to come and locate in the valley. New York, Philadelphia, Boston and many other eastern cities aro almost if not quite as well represented, while St. Paul and Minneapolis have more representatives here than any other several cities combined. Think these statements over and get your thinker going. Write to tho undersigned or the Medford Commercial Club for detailed informtaion about tho country, and you will never have cause to regret it. Bearing Orchards Near Medford Most of the producing orchards have been hold in largo holdings until recently. 9, few weeks ago tho Eden Valley Orchard, containing 605 acres, was placed on tho market in any desired acreage. Wo have been authorized to offer tho 'bearing apples and .peal's for sale, and if you know anything about this country and want a desirable block of bearing trees, write or como soon. During the past weok over $150,000 worth of the property has been disposed of. It is located within two miles of Medford at an elevation of about 100 feet above tho city and is one of tho best kept orchards in tho world. Parts of tho orchard offered for sale have paid tho owner over $600 per acre per year for four years straight. Do not como unless you aro prepared to stay, for just so sure as you do como the com bination of fat soil, grandeur of scenic beauty and Itajian climate will steal you, body and soul. After ono visit hero you will bo miserable any other place on earth. John D. Olwell EXHIBIT BUILDING MEDFORD, OREGON