Image provided by: University of Oregon Libraries; Eugene, OR
About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Oct. 31, 1910)
i i t- f ! ' m fz Medford Mail Tribune JIT MlWgiJM KlirOKI Mnrtfir Oo. OG A oenOilitlon of the Medford Mall, llineU 1B5VI II1H BUUVI1BIII Mll- (Ubllshed 1901: tho. Doomcr&tlo MMbllna 1B7Z; tnq Aanianu Mt Mtaimanca ivub. ana, mo Tribune, eitabiiiia iu. mgnOB PUTNAM, Editor and Manager' ' Mntered aa lecond-olaat matter No-1 ter 1, 10, at tho post otneo ai n4frd. OniRon, under the not or taxeh i, 187. ffftclal Paper of the City or Medford KTMKmxyrsov juii Jm year by man . hv 16.00 9se w month by malt .ou jKmonth delivered -by carrier In Medford, Aihland. Jackeonvlllo and Central rotni .50 Ausday only, by mall, per year... 2.00 Weekly, per year B TaU & Wire TTalted rreca Piapaicnea. The Mall Tribune Is on sale at tne Kerry Naw Stand. San Francisco. Xertfaad Hotel News Stand. Portland. .Bowman News Co.. Portland, Oro. -W. O. Whitney. Seattle, Wash. 'Hotel Spokano News Stand. Spokane. Foatare Kates. " I to 1!-Pr:o paper. J 11 to 24-paso paper It to 88'paso paper. 30 KWOHK CXKCTCATIOIT. Averotro dally for November, 1908 .......... CDecember, 1909 ...... 1,700 1.S4I 2.UJ January. iiv lary, ii " h. UlO . I, 1910 J'iKo 'Jarcn illav. 1910 !?: Jane. 1910 ." July, 1910 J." vAURUSt, 1910 ." September Olreoiauoa. MJffiV AT IT TXS iTlHtem iZS" l. ...... "4r 3. ......... JJ'JJ .. ......... --Z5 4. .... -Z3 9.......... 25 v.. ....... 'J 11 2500 it g 14 S450 18 25:5 KR IS... ....... '575 19 J575 JO S576 Jl 8575 2575 23 3575 25. ......... 'So 2C... ...... ?- 27 2J75 28 2709 39e "if SO 3710 Total. ??!? Avafon dailv ..... t51 'STATE OP OREGON, County of Jack- OxT'the'lat day of October, 1910, per aena,Uy appeared before me, George Fjit Sn. manager of the Medford Mall Trl 'trane, who upon oath, acknowledges that -the above figures are true (ot- 8eal Notary Public for Oregon. XEDTOKD, 0XOOK. Metropolis of Southern Oregon and Northern California, and the faatest rowlrig city In Oregon. Population. 1910. 9,000. Bank deposits 82.750.000. Five hundred thousand dollar Gravity Vater System completed In July, 1910, -jiving finest supply pure mountain "aXeen wiles of street being paved ft. a cost exceeding f 1,000,000. making a tal of twenty miles of pavement. Postofflce receipts for .year ending -June 30, 1910, show a gain of 38 per ent. Banner fruit city in Oregon Rogue River apples won sweepstakes prize ana " A?pla W of tne Woxl4" .... i5.lnnal Innl. Show. SDOKOne. H09. Rogue River pears brought hlgh at prices In all markets of the world 4ttrtn(r the past five years. Write Commercial Club, enclosing 8 eents for postage of the finest commu jtfty pamphlet ever written. Wanted "Ranch bands. Carpenters. . '"Woman cook. Girl for general hoosa work. sXaborers. . I FOR SALE. vBusmess, $200 daily, at invoice. Furniture and 10-room house. 'Good furniture cheap. .Business with long lease; average sales, 90 daily; $4,000. 'Business- 0 months' lease, $050. t4-cbair Oarber shop in good town. FRUIT LAND. "13 acres, chicken ranch, close in. 120 acres, 35 cultivated, fine bench and bottom land, $3600. .56 acres, 10 in orchard, 1 mile from ' station, price and terms right. ."Small tracts, unimproved, from 1 aero up, close in. 5 and 10-acre tracts, full bearinR. . J35 acres, 1-2 in orchard, 9 acres al falfa, easy terms. T.33 acres, 12 acres orcbard,' alfalfa, fine water right, $15,000 terms. '10 to 100 acres, cleared, close in, fine pear land, $150 to $200 per acre, -good terms. :36 acres, 1 mile out, all in orchard. buildinKS, $350 acre quick sale. ".$1000 will handle fine bearinR orch ard, close in. 1120 acreB, 10 in orchard, 25 alfalfa, under ditch, tools, stock. $13,500. H8 acres 2 1-2 miles Btation; good Jjuildinirs; 15 acres bearing and -younR orchard, $0500, terms. "90 acres cleared, rich soil, close to Eagle Point, sub-divide, $125 per acre. 160 acres fine hoR and truck ranch, .J1200 will bandle. CITY PROPERTY. n into r.Rl2fi each. JD00 for both. 2 acres, near West Main paving, in side limits, sauuu, loriua. ,2 4-rooni houses, lots 50x100, ?230Q takes both, '3-room bouse, 2 lots, each 50x175, $100 down, balance monthly. $500 down takes G room house, close in, balance monthly. J7 Westmoreland lots for quick Bale, $2000 cask, ts 00x112, $275, easy terms. Lots on South Orange, 50x128, $325, easy terms. Quarter-acro traots on Orange and Peach, $350, easy terms. 5 acres, close to limits, for platting ideal situation, $609 acre. rots in West Walnut Park, $350, $25 down, 10 monthly. TIMER, M6fl, gores on now Hill II, R., 20 acres pay ior au. 3,00 acres fine timber on new Hill railroad; well situate. . F. A. BITTNER .itaMTaylr PMppt life iKaakla f.r fcMlta. A FIGHTER, NOT IT HAS been aptly stated that residents oC the First congressional district are "wearied of being represent ed in congress by a male school niarni." Thev are tired of pedantic instruction and egotistical sounding brass, of trimming, of political bewilderment and lusincenty. The .First district should be represented by a man ol brains, of courage, by a fighter for the rights of humanity, a man whose legislative record shows him a militant figure for the people. Congressman Hawlcv has ever been, according to Sen ator La Follette, "a faithful servant of the system." He should bo replaced bv a faithful servant of the people. Such a man is Robert Of. Smith, a native son of Jack son countv, a self-made man, one of the ablest lawyers and the best orator in the district, a born fighjter, a man of courage, pertinacity and brains. It "is seldom that southern Oregon has a chance to se cure representation in congress. The chance is now of fered. Lt should be eagerly grasped. Bob Smith's majority in .Tackson county should be large enough to elect him. As a matter of local pride, of patriotism, and for the future welfare of the district, Bob Smith should earn Jackson county almost unanimously. SOME DON'TS IN CALIFORNIA an insurgent, Hiram Johnson, heads the republican ticket. Eost of the remainder of the ticket consists of the old line "regulars." This condition is reversed in Oregon. The ticket is headed by the assembly nominee, "Jay Bowerman," while a majority of the remainder are anti-assembly insurgents. "I, lli c4-rtfnc nnnnnli! mn niniln t'nv "linVlllftllv" llV XU UULU OLaLUS tlUUbtllO leaders, who are lending support to those on the ticket who are directlv at variance'with the principles represented by the head of the ticket. It is another case of sacrificing principle for partisanship. Don't permit the party fetish to so blind you that you will vote for a candidate opposed to your principles. Don't vote for anv candidate you believe unworthy. Don't vote for a candidate simply because he wears a party label, opposed to principles of popular government. Don't vote for a candidate who, having repeatedly iu the past been a servant of system, now professes to have no interests but the people's. Don't vote for a candidate put forth by corporate in terests, for their interests are not yours. Don't vote for a candidate whose career has shown him opposed to the direct primary and to Statement One, and whose candidacy was promulgated in the hope of nullify ing popular government. A SOCIALISTS REPLY TV. hn VHIfnr- Plpaae crant me s:ace in your pa- to answer an article in a local r entitled. "No Wage Slavery." writer takes issue with Eugene per Tho tvri.or takes issue with EuRenei V Debs and the socialists for calling the wage class wage slaves, and goes on to say that "never In the history ' .i i.-iw-..! wnv, h-m there bepn such unbounded prosperity as at present " He further states: "Where L tya mnn that now has an auto-. mobile that belongs to him. that has nnt been one of the down-and-outs at one time or another?" etc. The trouble with tne writer is inai he is long on argument ana snon on logic, for when he admits that it is possible for someone to rise iroiu . A t.l.t.nH Ann Via nrt a lower ciass iu u uiau uuo u ."- inlts the facts of divergent classes of a subject class and a master cla.s, for it is Impossible for one to rise from a lower class to a higher lt there are no classes. Now, If there are two classes there must be some economic bases for them. Tho economic basis for the wage slave class lies in the fact that they are a subject class. Just as much 30 as were the chattel slaves of the south In 1SC1. John Adams In 177G says: "That as to this matter, it was of no consequence by what name you call your people, whether by free- men or slaves. In some coun tries the laboring poor were called free men, in others slaves; but tho difference was only imaginary. What matters lt whether a landlord employing ten laborers on his farm gives them annually as much as will buy the necessities of life, or gives those necessaries at short hand"? (From "Lost Principles of Sectional Equilibrium Barbarosa. page 39). And the Charleston. S. C. Baptist association memorial to tho state legislature In 1835, In opposing abo lition, put it thus: "It ampunts In effect to this: whether tho opera tlves of a country shall bo bought and sold, aa in this state (South Carolina) or whether they shall be hirelings, and their labor become property, as In other states." So you see many of tho old slave masters saw tnai mere wu uu " ference, so they opposed making the chantre But lt was not wunin tno mo juim cu-ujiuionuu ui m u nower 'of tho chattel alave owners capital In tho means of production, to nrovent the wage system from sup- Labor using capital freely to create planting the chattel slave system, wealth for itself and appropriating Tho wake system, bolng the cheaper this wealth for its own welfare, but svetora Vould havo destroyed chat-(according to statements mado this tel slavery, even If there had beon would destroy the worklngman's In--n wnr. E. H. Andrews, In hts'centlvo. "Slnverv and Domestic Slave Trade," 1 printed 'in 183C, says of Maryland, page 42: "In this Btato slave iaoor has long slnco ceased to bo profit able. Tho Irish and other foreign ers aro fast taking tho place of col ored laborers, and domestic serv ants." I am only giving you these great difference, only In the way instances to prove that there is no which tho slavery is otieciea, In olden times the masters owned r. man find wnmRIl flH Chattel, and I the men and women as chattel. andinB jmru during the seven dnys inter- nnnronrlated all thev produced, ox cept their keep. Now the ma-te.-s own things that men and women m.ior nun to nrnduce the necessities of life and appropriate through tho wage .system all but a bare Hying for tim -w-iee Blavo. And slave he is,, for ainvn (a a nersnn who Is subject to another for his or her means of liv ing, for ho cannot wprK wiuioui 1110 permission of the masters of bread, who will only givo that permission on coifdltlon that ho will produco a surplus over and above his wages (his cost of malntalnanco) dnd the amount of wages la determined oy hla standard of living and the nunu hnr of men offering themselves for sale on tho open market. Tho mas- TRIMMER, WANTED. TO VOTERS. till. iimv J-v .-. ...v . to- jters do not buy men's bodies as they ! .iPA.I n thnv lim lnhnr nna'nr. lint tieod te: they buy labor power, but jvou cannot separate j from the human body, I The editor Is great ( labor power The editor Is great on quoting the uiimbcr of automobiles owned by one-time wage-earners, but he has failed to give one single Instance of n wnrroworker who own an automo- bile. The fact that some one-time wage-earner now owns an auto does not prove that he earned it working for wages. The fact is tnai ne never could have owned one had he not .n.nfui in tin n ivfit?f-f.irnnr nnd hnve gotten into some exploiting scheni" ! to bent Jfoissant's tiino of 34 minutes which enabled him to reap where, nnd 38.8 seconds. While the judge? others had sown. , rje,i tm( Grahame White will not bo Then agaln. many of those s- ... , . .. . . ... called ownlrs of autos doe not rcnll. lnnit cd to fly twice in the same own them, for one man in Medfo.d , contest, it is understood that he will holds notes on 81 autos and anotht-riinke a formal demnnd for the $10. 19. Is this some of tho substantial 000 priz(, offeml jjy Thomas F. Iivnn Prosperity the writer Is cackling ! honM hj .n . Tho writer states that this talkUnnt's record. about "having a world to gain" Is, a part of th doctrine that the laborer 1 pass XwetltV DaVS. ",VT,:iVV.,0 dR not nroduco nil and that capital produces a part. It seems strange that he cannot dis tinguish botweon capital and capi talist. We socialists never Intend to abolish capital as an Instrument in production. All we wish to abolish is the private owners of such. Capi tal as an Instrument In the produc tion of wealth is as necessary as la bor power, and capital la only Btored up labor power of previous labor. We have capital Invested in our postal systom, but no private capitalist and no private profit male by tho United States government. The only prof Its made are made by the privately owned railroads who annually ex ploit the United States government. What wo want Is that all capital used In the' production of wenlth shall bo collective proporty of all the people. The only thing that will be destroyed will be tho right of tho private capitalist to uso this capital to appropriate from the workers all but a bare living. This is not try ing to run tho country vIth labor alone, as tho writer styles lt, but will htW U k ! ww .. t 4--. , 'be the running of tho country with Profound logic, Is lt not? J. W. WILSON. CAMPAIGN SPELLBINDERS WORKING IN CALIFORNIA SAN FRANCISCO. Oct. 31. The stump speakers will bo worked over time and the campaign spellbinder in a more dignified wny will labor just no linf1 1iitnir (lin lini-nn Intra illlnn- vening uotoro tlte mil eiounn.w. 1 California tho cuuipaign i-i ending in tho approved "whirlwind" fnshion, Both parties are putting forth every effort to win nnd each is claiming yjctory already won. Bell and ohnson will bd'tl; bo in San Frnnpisco during tho closing week. At least three big meetings will be addressed by Hiram-ohnson, the republican candidate, nnd two will hoar Theodore A. Bell, demo cratic candidate for governor, Hasklns for health. TO SEED MANY ACRES 10F FOREST Forest Reserve to Tnko Steps at Once to Cover Tracts Burned Ovot In Crater Forest Durlnn Recent Forest Fires. I'nrt of. the burned over forodt nroix in (ho Crater National reserve wilt bu somlod this your, iiutl work will be commenced at oucu on thin line. The noroiiKo' to ho seeded consists of tho tracts which were formerly oovorcd by brush tuul which were burned almost elenu by tho fires. There nro 1100 acres to bo seeded in the Ashland ros-ene, and S00 neres on Oat Mill, where tho firo swept away tho ehapparal and snow Imih mid left ideal ground for seediinr. 0vin to tho fact that it is impos. sible to secure native seed, those of European varieties havo boon se cured, which by itvpcriiuoift havo prmed capable of bointr grown in thN nltitudo and environment. I'iue from Austria, tho principal commercial pine of Europe, European larch nnd Norway spruce will bo sown. 'All those trees imi of ranid irrowth and are expected to quickly reforest the burned over men. MOISSAHT FLIES AROUND STATUE Aviators Compete in Series of Spe cial Events Spirit of Unrest Among Bird-Men Grahame White 4 to Make Flight to Statue Also. 4 MOISANT I1ELMOKT 1AKK, X. V.f Oct. 31. Aljliui;h the international aviation meet was officially called when the sunset Kim was tired last night, the aviators today vied with each other in a series of special events, provid ing as Reed a day's sport ns any that has yet been seen. Feature of the prosrroin were the two-lioiir race and tho dual graud Meed te.st between Qrahamu White and JfcCurdv. The first race carried a prize of 3000 and the second ,f!000. divided 30d0 to the winner and $1000 to the loser. The victory of John Moissnnt in the race yfotcrday to tho Statue of Liberty and return, while a popular a popular one, created a spirit of un rest ninoin; tho competing bird-men nnd Grahame White today announced he would fly to the Btrittio in nn effort SExVTTLK. 0,'t. 31.-Twentv days hnve passed since Professor II. M. Colvin. instructor in Spanish at tho University of Washington, bade fare well to food. ' If ho dooMi't lid hun gry the faster will continue to abstain from nourishing food another fort night nt least. During this time he hns taught sixteen elnsscs a week nnd attended ns a student twelve clnsses a week in the liny school. For exercise ho has worked in tho gymnasium and 00 tho track. Ho hns also writton mng nzino articlen since beginning his wist. C'ohiu hub Hiiffurcd with stom ach trouble nnd is noting upon tho hypothesis that what his stomach needs is a good rest. Make every "special sale" really strengthen your Btore by taking care that your ad readers learn the truth about each sale. ABUSrJ OF TUB INITIATIVE. It is 11 gross abuse of tho right" guaranteed by the Initiative and Hef eienduin Amendment to tho Oregon Constitution to bring up woman suf frage at every general olcctiou, This measuro wns Bitbmited in 1000 nnd beaten by u plurality of 2137. In I19$0 it wns ngain proposed and was beaten by J10.173. In 1008 it was again on the ballot and it was beaten by a majority of 21,049. Notwith standing these repeated defeats, mpre deceisivo at each election, the same measuro is again on the ballot this vear. Tho ballot title is misleading and indicates u proposal to givo votes to tnxpaving wemon only, hut the measure to be voted 011 is the Hiiuie proposition which the pooplb have ho often mid so recently condemned. It should be votod down'this ,yenr bv 1111 increased majority, especially bo- cduse of the fraud iliidertakqn to bo perpetrated on the pooplb by the uso of u false mid misleading title on tho ballot, OltEGON ASSOCIATION OPPOSED TO WOMAN SUFFRAGE, Mrs. Francis James Bailey, President. (Paid advertisement). What the It gives cities and towns the right to have saloons or no saloons. It gives the people i'ho live in cities tho right to vote on and dooido this ouestinn them selves. It nuts tho control of tho lunlor trat'i'ic into tho hands or tho voters 6( ninth nvnmiinf ur Hnif mrm l'nulilniW in 1 fliuti'itf lit ii iiW.v nv town fi It means roal local option. All state criminal laws it inn iiiw umni inuivi's tumuli tun ncannu wiiulu wuuti whore not wanted, It means regulation which regulates. Klamath Fads Lots Wantea I want to Purchase 4 or 5 well situated lots in Hot Springs or Hillside Addition, Klamath Falls. Please Give lot and block number and price. Address Box 84, Kenton Station, Portland. Ore. TheJacksonCountyBank This bank is authorized to aet as agent in all mutters of trust, to exoeuto tr usts J!or individuals, firms, corporations, co-partnerships, joint stock compa nies; to act as the fiscal agent of any state, municipality or corporation nnd to accept the responsibilities incident to t rustoeshins. Most Complete Safety Deposit System in the City Capital $100,000 Surplus and Profits $60,000 ITns done a commercial banking business in Medford nearly a quarter of u century and nt all times under the same management. We invite you to call or write. 4 W. I. VAWTJSR, President O. It. LINDLEY, Vice-President C. W. McDON A LD, Cashier CHINESE EMPRE TO SOOttl REFORM American Syndicate to Float Loan of $50,000,000, Which Is Regarded As Forerunner of Period of Reform In the Empire. PEKING, Oct. 31. Foiinairau iiouuccmeut of the plans of mi Ameri can syndicnto to oat n loan of $(). 000,000 in China is reminded hurts today us tho forerunner of a period of reform in tho empite. It is said that tho rat u0 to which n great part of tho loan will bo put is tho unification and reform of the curronoy of China. The loan will bo used as security for tho money now enrront in China, which is of difforcnt denomination and diffornu. vnlucs. Thero nro 150 kinds of stat dnrd coin designated as the tuel. Over twolve difforcnt kinds of dol lar, nro in oxistonco. This money will be withdrawn, standard ileuoin inntions issued nnd the old coins ic minted. Tho monetary reform alone will ro- act favorably upon tho mercantile life of China, it is expected, and will pave tho way for groator advance ment in building nnd organization. Voto No on Annexation. Tbo portion of Wusbingtou county proposed to bo nnnoxed to tho Mul tnomah Is soven miles wide, contains 112 of our 730 sections, our and a half of our flftoon mllllonn of taxa ble proporty, ono-fourth of our vot orfl and population and one-half of our railroad miloago. Plvo hundred voters of tills strip bavo slgnod n romonstranco against annexation a clonr majority, as loss than 3 ftp sign ed tho potltlon nnd about 000 votos woro caBt at tho last sconral elec tion. In addition to tbo many who favored annexation now bpposo lt and say tho cut was mado too deep, Wo ask you to- voto No on Waahlng- ton-Multnomab division, W. D. Wood, chairman Anti-Annexation commlftoo, Hlllsboro, Oregon. (Paid Advertisement.) If yon are worth more you can earn more, Tell what you can do what vou en n do well in n classified ad, Home Rule Really Is CANDIDATES OFF ON LAST WEEK Outcome Become Bowerman and West in Doubt Multnomah County Said to Be on the Fence in the Gubernatorial Race. PORTLAND, Or., Oct. 31. -Lead-in:; randldntcs for state and congres sional officii today ontorod on tho last wcok of tbo cninpnlgn In Oregon, prccodlng tho Koncrnl elcctloi. next Tuesday. Whllo lt is conceded that tho re publicans will swoop tho stnto, tho outcomo of tho fight bctwobn Jay Dowermnn, tho republican candldnto, and OHwnld WoHt, tho domocratic ilneo for govornor, Is In doubt. Slnco Dowermnn wns nominated at tho prlmnrlcH, u bitter fight has boon mado against him by Independent and democratic lenders, who assort that tho oloctlon of Uowormnn moans tho donth of Statcr.ont No, 1, which Is a voluntary plodgo taken by stnto sen atorial and roprosontntlvo nomlnoos to elect any candidate to tho Unltod States senate who rccolvcs tho on dorsomont of tho votors at tho procod Ini; general oloctlon. Uowormnn has donlod tho chnrgo and hns ondorsod tho primary law In which Stntomont No. 1 Is Included. West, who vns stato railroad com missioner, has mado an onvlnblo po litical rocoid, and his followors as sort that ho will carry tho stnto. Re publican londoru admit that tho dom ocrntlc candldnto probably will carry nouthorn Oregon, but thoy doclnro t'at noworman will win out In east ern Oregon and In tho northwoat juntloH, U.T.VO Multnomah county, which Is In doubt, Tho republican majority in tho stnto is approximate ly 24,000. IiAVK VOU VKT 8RKN TIIOHK FbASIIINQ KYKS7 Havo yqu .scon tho flashing oyou? They flnsb at night on East Main St. Dr. Hlckort la rosponBlblo for tho uowost novelty in oloctrlc ulgns, Whon down town In tho oyonlng watch for tho flashing oyoj, If you nevar "los any timo" ex cept that spent In fruitlessly answer ing want C(s, you'll got along! Bill 328 rSi'ntnnf.nd. are maintained, Under it S '11 I) tlllU IIIMUDDIUIU (l'util Ailvertliiiirnt.) up SEEKS FAVOR Court Martial Sentence Analnst Mil lionaire's Grandson Cause of Com motionRefused to Accept Order Transferrlnn Him to Fort Myer. WASHINGTON, Out. 31. Army olllcinldoui is being moved today for tho commutation of a court martial sentence iuiHricd recently on Albert J. Myer, the "millionaire soldier," grandson of Oenoral Albert Myer, a ohil war veteran, after whom Kurt Myer, Wyo was named. "To ho reduced to tho grnilo of private nnd to ho confluod at hard labor for three inontliH uud to l'orfoit .$50 now duo or to become due," was tho sontonco of Colonol Myer, im posed by tho court martial at Fort Hanks, whon tho millionaire olubmau, society londor and onliotod soldier refused to nccopt an order transfer ring him from Fort Dunks to Fort Myer. Tiio nowff at tho timo caused a shook in Washington social oirclos and it is said caiiBod seorot joy in army circles among coiiimnndiiip; of ficers, who little rolishod mooting an enlisted man in oveniug attire at Un cial functions. Tho technical charge against Myer was "neglect of dutj' to the good or der nnd military discipline." The rovoiwing court martial is passing nontoniio, recommended labor whilo in prison nwniling trial ho ox (tiifjcd. Myer was a sooinl lion and invot orato "pink tonite" of last yoar'n so cial season. Tho sooioty sot was kopt in ignorance of Myor'n military tribulntions nnd confidently expected to hoar thnt ho soon would roooive a commission, COOPER'S SECOND TRIAL SET FOR FIFTEENTH NASHVILLE, Oct. .11. Tho trial of Robin Cooper, fof tho killing of iomior unltod btntbn Bonntor Kd- ward W. Cannack, was sot todnv to bogin Novembor If). Coopor, it Is charged, Bhot Cnr mnok ns tho rosult of nn attack on Coopor by Carmnok through tho col umns of a nowspnpor of which tho hitter was editor, Iliiskins for health. RICH SOBER MOMffHK V3$5m3uLm -il&Wkm . 'jfi V. V, , A,..rr.