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Che Casper Dai lp Tribune Tribune asyet Dailp Cribune at Casper TELEPHONES ing All Depa ing? ovember 22, 1916. stoffice as se MEMBER THE ASSOCIATED PRE SHARLES W. BARTON Preside: . Advertising Representatives. Pradder, King & Prudden, 1720. be the ones now to suppost most heartily the ef-/ forts of the administration to insure a reasonably 195 large American merchant marine, mM; 286 F 4 = are welcome. SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Carrier One Year . 5 department shows the exportation of wheat dur- ing recent fiscal years: 3.90 1915 Beeeee -+-++ 259,000,000 bushels 1.95 | 1916 nee and ~ er subscrip |1919 1920 Member of the Associated Press. Associated Press is ex ent lication of all news news published herein abore until 1918 coin shipping during the war. It was not until 1919 that | American shipyards began to produce ocean cargo} carriers in quantit redited in :his paper and your when your carrier m! Kick if You Don't Get Your Tribune. tin ween 6:39 and § o'clock p.m pune. A paper will be de ial messenger. Make {t your duty to i a The Most Undesirable + takes of governmen an anarc gountry at any time. a The Bally Nerve of ’Im UR ESTEEMED British cousin, Balfour, with the characteristic nerve and calmness of an that is nothing less than startling to the intell gence of even the liberal American mind. by the American people to European natioi cancelle from memory PERSON who can see only the possible mis {seyes to unquestionable and notorious crimes com mitied by the enemies of law and order, is at heart chist, whatever may be his pretensions in his public utterances. His sympathies are with j the idler, not with the worker. His concern is for '“the welfare of the rioter, not for the welfare of the law-abiding citizen. He glories in the success crime and bewails the supremacy of law. alts tyranny by intimidation and destroys respect for courts. In his zeal for the protection of the; right of some men to quit, he has no thought for| the right of other men to work. He justifies him-| self by quoting constitutional guarantees of free « speech, but he is in league with men who defy the constitutional guarantee of freedom to live. is against this government or any government that Proposes to protect the rights of all from the brute; force of a few. He is an undesirable citizen in any | enue law iteelf, More than ever the burden of the income tax, #!o7g the Kansas section of the is falling upon the middle class and those of mod- Fe Trail in 1866 buffato herds still est incomes. The small incomes are exempt and the} large ones are being dodged. He de-|tax is just, but the method of application is not sires that the following war debts, money lonned{#8 sane and practical as it should be. It was estab t be| lished when the world was on a war footing and it} t, charged off the books and dixmissed!%0es not readily adjust itself to changed economic| is | conditions. H separately and in the usual course of business, they may not do if they act by concert and for an eyil| purpose. | The same principle would seem to apply to the 15 and 16 right of men to qyit work. While they may quit! nent® severally, and in the ordinary course of employ-| 2 ciass|iment, it would seem that their conduct in quitting collectively for the purpose of breaking other man’s business would be just as un |the collection and presentation of bank checks | lown an-} wful as ————_o—_ 1 Indispensable Equipment URLING the recent war the Iack of ships pre vented us from marketing a great part of our| surplus products and caused tremendous fittan cial losses to all classes of citizens. The farmers especially suffered, and they should The table beiow from reports of the agricultural | | | 173,000,000 bushels 149,000,000 bushels | 34,000,000 bushels | 178,000,000 bushels | 1,000 bushels | 3,000,000 bushels The progressive dwindling of exports show les with the dwindling of | of other farm commodities fol-| Export statist lowed variations in the number of American ships almost as closely as did wheat. This is but one of many examples that could be cited of the need that | tha national emergency. been felt for American merchant ships during a | Such need is not confined to abnormal times, however. Today the whole world is the market of| every producer. The nation that controls transpor- | tation naturally takes preference over all others in| officials and blinds his/™arketing of its own goods. Sh SES Inequitable and Unjust | HERE APPEARS to be.a regular and sustained | slump in the income tax receipts of the gov-! ernment. It is calculated by experts that the rev-| of enues for the calendar year will fall at least twen ty-five per cent below the estimates. We are becoming a nation of trained tax dodgers and there are numbers of skilled and experienced | men who make a comfortable living by showing business men and corporations how to shave their {tax returns. Many of these have been in the serv-| jice of the government and are familiar with the pes. They are well-within the law and no just| A man with a million dollars invested in tax- Roferences of old timers to the A . 2 changes that fault can be found with them. They are simply|naxotas, W enabling their clients to take such personal advan- tage as they may from the weaknesses of the rey-|cali that when I was engaged in the jtransportation of freight by ox team within the memory of living men re- remained there in such numbers that |when encountered on our drives they rs 5 ‘ |seemed like a low cloud crossing the The incomes of the wealthy are going into tax-| plains. At times they approached so Englishman makes a serious financial proposal | ¢x¢mpt securities and the real purpose of taxation!near our wagon train that we coula|(eflation was berun soon afterw -|is being lost to view. The principle of an income!shoot them without going out of our way. The Fate It Deserves heard, as the The Days of "67 ve taken place in the yoming d Montana auta at E r c ti t while awe were Jiv Armenia -$ = 13,187,466.12 | cas rates ing in a dugout along the Arkansas Austria jexempt securities pays no taxes on his income. jriver.in what is -now western Kan Belgium 8,515,738.88 | The man with a miilion dollars invested in an|cas, buffaloes coming down to the|* Cuba f : 8,147,000,00|¢™ploying industry pays every known form of tax-|frozen stream looking for water were Czecho-Blovakia shot from the inside of our rough Greece Hungary 1,891 Italy Latvia Liberia Lithuania Nicaragua Poland Roumania Russia ~ . - 5 5 Serbia Cob eeaerchoaostecesece Total pare = If an Englishman could pull a joke this be considered a huge one; bat an eleven dolar joke is away beyond an Englishman. old boy is serious. But where does he get that car cellation stuff he so gliby suggests? Surely Britain presents nothing in her history re motely approaching the forgiveness of debts due her} or refuaal, of money loaned by her. If she show aught but insistence upon full payment of money regardless of hardship to the debtor, or can change the opinion of the world respecting her tend- ency to grab the territory of other nations and peo: ples, rightfully, wrongfully or otherwise in order} fo gain possession, then she would more properly be fitted to lead a debt cancellation campaign. has set no example and precedent looms larger| in the English mind than it does in the Ameri. can mind. Well is it remembered in America that days following the civil strife in our own 1 as the aftermath, when’ money to us was the most} ir strikers’ wages, more millions in operators’ prof-|was the last I ever saw of any of the i€ valuable thing in the world, we were shown no len- jency | }e@estion than her monumental cheek. io a Law of Conspiracy Hhing it did not want to do. © present them whenever they chose ithe ordinary course of busines: the right to accumulate the checks them in agg the busij nk called upon 103,824,260,03 | ation. eae Does this encourage industrial development? | 2abitation. Qn our way up the Arkansas river tran Fort Lyon, Kansas, to Denver! the spring of 1867 we came to what is now the busy. industrial city of Pueblo, Colorado. I remember the site pri: large wall tent where. you could get} a small tin cup of dead eye corn whisky for 25 cents. Two of them put once more become active and at a recent con-|your eyesight all right and at the ference of securities commissioners of the midenst- ern states, the opinion was freely voiced that the} ould pass the senate and become the law} The only other sign of civilization |there at that time was a rude shed} used by a frontier blacksmith to re-| set the tires on prairie schooner wheels. On the long overland jour- ney, usually from the Missouri river or east, the wheels would become very 15,694,148.42 : ecerer| kena it not be well to change laws permiting tax g5| exempt securities thus equalizing the tax burden | o9| 80. that those most able to pay will be charged with| 000.00 | their just share, and the man of modest means re- lieved of an unjust burden? 3,770,904 4,746,862,560 1,891,514,634.2 measure ¥ of the land. ya! ing in the guise of investment saviors, proves that the fight is not yet over and that the sentiment of ;the west must be marshalled strongly to impress jupon these gentlemen the fact that they have gone!l!oose and the drivers would insert about far enough ‘in hampering legitimate’ mining, ‘oil and land development enterprises. $11.517,660,341.( use of the mails for stock selling purposes. We al- can | Te24Y have laws covering this subject and the bill | tour in our party had saved in a few in the} wages and same working conditions that prevailed Z ‘ and, and| April 1, when the strike began: The net result| mance. ic the gloomy financial prospects that harassed us\of the walkout is a loss of hundreds of millions H by the nation that has profited b: = and increased her national wealth by h billions of dollars in territory and raw materi: Mot to mention the elimination of her greatest c «mercial competitor and transportation rival. Britain has no basis for her preposterous sug- |has seldom been so glaringly revealed as in the |coal controversy. Neither side gained its object, if CITE LIKELY the United States supreme court ‘ will decide if it ever has the opportunity, that {Suc same limitations that apply to combinations of “apital also apply to combinations of labor. We “have in mind just at this moment the decision | Stendered in the suit brought by a bank to enjoin {24 group of banks from gathering up a lot of checks and presenting them all at once in order to em- Smetarrass or “break” the bank against which they (ere drawn. The banks that presented the checks i2contended that they had a right to present the Si@ehecks whenever it suited their conrenience—that ithe fact that the standing armies of the world to. | tal 6,179,000 men. This makes of Europe nothing Shey could present them one at a time or they @ould accumulate them for a month and present {Shem all at once. The purpose of presenting them ieall at once was to coerce the bank into doing some- } The supreme court held that while the banks in Chloroform This Fax Raiser The activity of these commissioners masquerad-| This measure is supposed to prevent fraudulent We All Lose hard coal miners are back at work at the same| its, still more millions to consumers in higher|three, and atter fifty-six years 1 won. y the war) prices for fuel, and a great deal vf discomfort to|4er What became of them. Having of|all concerned. It is true that a commission -will in-|P*e™ the youngest of the party at the als| quire into the coal industry with a view to recom- om-;mending beneficial reforms, buf otherwise the} status quo of last ‘spring has been maintained.} Whether the fault lies with the workers or the owners, the fact is that the stupidity of strikes and both sides and the public lost heavily. ene M ilitary Burdens monthly letter to its clients, calls attention to} more or less than an armed camp. Thirteen nations have larger standing armies than the United States, and in the figures Ger-| If anyone can advance a single valid excuse for the withdrawal of this yast number of men from ers and taxpayers of the world we should like to hear the excuse. It is significant that criticism should come from} a great financial institution; and it is a cause for/4ay for neariy a week. holding checks against another bank had to do so in} do not yoice protest. they did not haye} and present | (UV ORK and the world works with you; strike, the purpose of breaking down| © e wonder that more business concerns of the world —-~--0-— and you strike alone.” Some dgy we will get} ion, = same time seriously impair your other | ftadulties. |wooden wedges between the fellies jand the tires to hold them together luntil a blacksmith could be reached. We could possibly haye bought the site of the town with dvhat little the in no way prevents or penalizes fraudulent stock|months from our wages and the sale selling schemes conducted personally. It simply makes it harder for legitimate develop- | kansas during the winter. ment enterprises to do business, adds a hoard of} new officials and inspectors to the public payroll |f the four heading tor and increases the general tax burden. {jody Partner S00) 1 aiacihe “out’ foe Denver. There I secured a job with the Delando outfit hauling lumber with ox teams from the Divide to pro- HE COAL STRIKE has ended and poth soft and |¥ide the materials for about the first building operations in Cheyenne, now the capital of Wyoming. i My partner hired out as a mule jof wolf skins secured along the Ar- On the third day we separated, two Juliesburg on the North Platte. This time I.am now probably the only sur- yivor. Someone with a penchant for sta- jtistics has figured that a dime's worth of electricity, based upon a price of j10 cents per kilowatt hour, wil! por- 1 , - NE OF the leading banks of Los Angeles, in a {orm the following services in the Operate a 16-candle lamp for about a month. One month and a half. ‘ = 7: . jaheetseach week for. shout t many is not counted as having a single soldier. | tronths and a helt, Ss fee in an-electric percolator. |halt to one week, 4 (heat used. Hed ug around to a situation which will justify the as-'t pay tlo legally when acting se 3 x pally as the location of a under your belt would. deaden ta Fe and} an expedition bound for ALBERT H. BAISELEY. What a Dime Will Do Operate a six-pound flat iron for Do a washing equivalent to twenty Operate a vacuum cleaner long h f M/enough to clean about one-tenth of productive operations to be supported by the toil-lan acre of carpet. Operate a sewing machine for jtwenty consecutive hours. Drive an electric fan four hours a Brew two arid a half gallons of cof. Operate a heating pad for from one pending upon the Operate a wi (Democrat) in a recent attack on the Republican party adr tion was a Wilson road brotherhocds “to exert all the and was we!l under way in July, 1920, whe the Democratic administration The ronsted meat -of some of the} “2% yet in power. young buffalos was juicy, tender and satisfying and for a wlille at least we could forget about’ bacon. Late in| | Newniccbarnae tee up, the farmer and ranclitr against the, Republican party on the false plea that the Republicans, and not deflation—low priges and low wages. the laborer, from Democratic destruc- tive inflation by rev Finance corporation. and farm loans over the veto of a Democratic presi- dent. Posed to make direct loans from the treasury up to $50,000,000. this plan on the ground that {t prob: ably was unconstitutional and cer- tainly was too small In scope. jent_t Something You Should Know That, Senator Heflin of Alabama itted that defla gue. That in the (latter part of 1919 ident Wilson promised the rail-| ower of government to reduce the On of living.” . That in pursuance of this promise That the Democrats, aided by cer- nin Democratic leaders of _ labor, haye persistently endeavored to line he Democrats, were responsible for That the Republican party saved rancher and farmer, and indirectly ing the War That the Republicans first’ pro- 7 t Frank W. Mondell opposed That he favored revival of the War Finance corpofation, upon the_pres sis, which Has loaned “more than $400,000,090 in the nation; nearly $9,000,000" of {t in Wyoming. You're Always a “Boy” To Your Ma Don’t frown af’ your mother, When she calls you her “boy,” For, to mother, you never grow old, And ‘tho she Jooks at her man-child now with joy She lives in the d for a toy; Ah, you're pnly a “boy” to your Ma. Ss when you cried The dear lithe love-chita, She held close to her breast, béd toe, Ma, don't you know first beau"? Ah, you're only a ‘ You belong to another And she calls you her “rman,” meet; « and tan, sweet; Just @ “boy” to your Ma, No matter how old you may grow; Just’a “boy,” to your mother, "Tho the years swiftly flow. And ‘tho you beigng to another, In her heart of hearts ‘You never grow old, You are always a “ho: Mrs. Lilliam’ L. Van Burgh. Casper, Wyo. The Hunter Biutt January ‘skates and s'eds And tinkling sleigh belis «brings, And February wears a heart And Cupid's rosy wings. Mareh slops along in rubber boots, And April spreads wit! care Atgreen umbrella o'er her head, Although her feet aro bare. And June a sheepskin shows, July comes in with fireworks But with a reaper goes, Ard August paddles a cance And drowses in the sun, er pump long enough Jons 1,100 fe raise 100. Make 100 ss of toast, bag.a The Mermaid’s Gift A beautiful mermaid fell in love With a youth who lived, on land, And they used to meet in the movn- And spoon on the silver sand. But there came a night when the mer-! maid wept, ."I must away, i ‘To marry a merman king who rules | The dim world under the sca.” "But here is a parting gift,” she cried, “From your green eyed ocean girl. A treasure rare from an amber cave Ina grotto built of pearl.” And sae left jn his hand a snowy shell Ere ohe sank to her coral cloister— He opened it, Jo! and found within A plump apd succulent. oynter. eile Sam Saye . The Sensitive Nose - “Do you Know why? you “sniff the air” when trying to catch @ faint” odor? inquires b “It is’ because the nerves gov- erningythe sense of smell are mot_lo- cated, as is generally supposed, in the nasal passage, but in an area of sen- sitive membrane about the size of a located high above each “A portion of the hairtike tips of the olfactory nerves terminating cnembrene ‘receives tmpression and conducts Because of the position of this membrafie outside the of the breath, it is necessary to draw side a current of alr by sniffing be- tore the exact shade of an odor can be determined. * “The effects of snuff and smelling have nothing to do’ with the They react only on » linings of the nasal passages. ‘So far as physiologists have been able to learn, smells are: nigeonholed | the brain as sense of smell. impressions. associated images are brought forth by the.brain when| particular nerves are excited. “The reaction of the brain to an o@or depends also to a large extent on .the sense of taste. bining the brain reports of these two senses can odors be accurately cata- Only hy com- The tear-stained face and little stub- The shy boy who whispers, “Why “Degenerate as the olfactory nerve has become it still retains the marveh } ous ability to detect one part of cam-| phor in.four -hundred thousand parts of air, and one part of vanillin in ten} : million. parta of air. noxious smell mercaptan, the human detect the presence of one in twenty-five trillion parts of That I am imy own Uttle eweetheart's through oy” to your Ma, As for the ob- And now together life's battles you But mother-love sees still the dimples| To her the memories of childhood are ee ee Valuable Tests the construction of permanent} considerable attention being drawn at the present time to 4the effect of alkalized soils on con- crete road base. The United State Bureau of Stand- discussing the of Cement Drain Tile and Concrete in throws sony illu. Ah, you're only 2 “boy” to your Ma. * to your Ma. “Durability Alkalized Soils’ minating light 6n the situation. Tile under study were 1913 in eight alkali bearing districts of the west According to the conclusions of this latest report, the best quality of con- crete will disintegrate when exposed attacks dnd instal Jations of concrete in soils containing more than @1 per cent of salts of the} sulphate type should be preceded by! an examination of surrounding con- in to severe alkali This report is of utmost importance | to western states which contemplate the ‘laying of -permaneyt highways lacross vast stretches ofMland contain-! May drives_a loa(led moving yan, Two-Car Men Are Worse Than Old Two-Gun Men | - Ever Was, Hey Reader? ____ MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1922. BY JOHN HANDSHAKER (Special Casper Correspondent) Readers: Well, Readers, I'am a New Bird around here and I do not wish to do much Peeping, as yet, because New Laid Birds should be seen and not However, I will say that I ser- tainly lke this town fine, if only I will Live Long Enough to enjoy it} But when I came out to this country I am figuring on a “Short Life anda Gay One.” Th's is what the Baby says which drinks what is sold to him by a Bootlégger as Applejack, and f.nds out Very Shortly afterwards that the stuff is only Japelac after all Well, 1 come in town the other ¢ay to get a job on this Rag, or Paper, lke a guy will do which is rushing about working on Newspa- Ders at one time and another; and I no more than set my feet in the place before I begin to take my Ife in my Hands and, do a Japanese Juggling Act with it. I am figuring there are a Lot of things Doing out here; but I do not realize how Fast guys are doing them! I am used to a Berg like New York, where a bird can, go along Slow if he wants to without getting Tele- scoped. However. you can not do that around here I will tell All and Sunday! A baby which does that around here will serctainly land on his Neck, all spread out Ike a Sweedish Strawberry Festival or a Sunday Plenick. the Two Gun Guys, and Sgforth. on their legs, fords them. "Reader. The Two Gun guys of th green’ Ment! are needing a Shave, is’ like it fine, as Tam sayivg. Sf BUS PIGEON’S COFFEE It’s Fresh Roasted Pigeon Tea & Coffee Co. Phone 623 poet hath ft, I believe’ I hit in this’ Joint off ‘of Hale Holden's Burlington steam train a short time’ ago, andthe first thing I do is look around to see wiiere are the Cowboys, and Bad Men, and am very disappointed I do not see any right away, because where I am back East I am doping it ont that there wll be a lot of Bronko Busters’ Mustang Masseuses and Pinto Pushers around with these things they call Fellows, or Chaps, hooting up. the Town i Woking likes Apimated Fringe. Mf course, I will not be out in the ptreet long watching these - birds when they begin the shooting; but will dive through the nearest door- way or into a Sewnr =a take “whatever protection the xruund af- “as they emy In the late Army. However, I am very interested in them until they start Shooting;-and after that I figure I wilt only Hear Well, nothing like this comes out here these daze, I am notaeing, ‘West is gone “where the Polson Iyy Twineth and the grass is ever (Keats, I think). There: js not any more Bad Gun Men. They all take up Jobs in-the Movie... T guess, from the number of them T geen on the Screen now’. But the Great West !s a. whole lot -more dangerous now than it is in the daze of the Hard Riding, Hard Shooting, Bunvh, belfeve .me; be- by from the other direction. And this guy is a better Shot. He does not Miss! Well, when I hobble back to the Sancturary of the. Sidewalk - with one leg which is doing me Practic- ally no good. I look around and a couple of blocks down the street in both directions is a Two Car Rat Man—which {s the bird that re- Places the Two Gun Man of Fron- ter Daze, Reader. A Two Cac Bad Man is a guy which keeps Two Cars, 50 when one of them gets ail dusty and Spattered Up with Citizens, he can have it wasted and use the other without losing atiy time. And belleve me theee babies Drive —what I mean! They can draw a bead on you over the radiator, (which i eaulpped with a Front Sight, I* guess, so as to make ‘em more Accurate), and they will Shoot the Cigarette right out of your mouth with edge of the wind shield two times’ out of three! The trou bie is with me that I am the Victim of-the Third Time! Tam thinking some as I nurse my Leg of the immoral lines of the Poet Biron, which is dedicated to Victims of Two Car Bad Men, and Which go you remember: “Half a Leg, Halt a leg, Halt a leg flopping: ‘ Right past the Maimed and Dead Autos go popping; . Theirs not to throw the clutch, Thelrs not. to stop—not much! Just heave the guy a crutch: Let him go hopping?" (Biron, 2s I recall it) You will see guys standing around town on street crossings sometimes grobably which looks as if. ther Pants is kind of Baggy at the Knees. But if you will look Close, Reader,~ you will notace that thy Pants {s not really Baggy. It onl? gives that appearance because the Owner is all ready to Jump at a second’s notace! Well, my Boss wishes to show me the town, soa guy which is a friend of his in his car. This baby sells Real Estate; and believe me, he shoots us around, all right! It is a won der the both of us are not so ful of holes we will make a Callander, or Sieve, look like it was Water tight! This baby is a Two Car Bad Man, and while he is Showing us the Scenery and point out how nice the Sage Brush grows on some lots he ha got (and will sell Very Reason- able, Believe Him, at Most Moder ate Terms!),.a Car comes around the corner-at a Muzzle Velocity of about 4% miles per Minnit! 4 Why we are not parked oun against some fine Cut Class, ox are resting Uneasily on top of a. Tele phone Pole I do not know, I will give you my words on that! Any- how, my Boss sees this cai and says kind of Mildly—Look out, hé says— and this Two Car Bad Man_ pivots cause there is plenty of Bad Auto The Fur-Bearing Cowboy which once wears these Fellows, or Cheps, and ts always looking as 1f his legs not “80 Prominent nowdaze. He is replace? by the Clean Cut Autoboy. which wears a high powered car or per- haps a Flivver under ‘him, and is so Hard Riding thathe makes the old Ranger look Sedentary! (It is ser- tainly no Ufe for a Nervous Wom- an around this burg; © although | Well, Reader, I am standirig on the corner of the street after I get off the train, ‘and I Casually Step off the Curb to go across the way. | As I do this Something goes past me which’ I first think is a Comic, or Shooting Star, and next think is | a Bolt cf Lightning. It does not | | Miss Me more than 3-8 of a inch Each smyll carries associations good! (or maybe 5-16—I am not good at | Higher Mathametics); byt anyway while [ am looking around to see } what Does Not Hit met, and How it happens, not to, Something goes Girls! Girls!! Save Your Hair With Cuticura || Seapags nteee ts cers Decteeeignaiahing ae on his Rear Axe], makes a turn, and is off down. a side street showinx us some more Real Estate and | Scenery. (In equal proportions), be- fore anybody is Killed. 5 ‘Well, he is sertainly a Good Bal 4 Man, ail right, Nobody. can come so {ynear getting Busted Up into Smal! ;} Lots as he does without being « ‘very good Two Car Bad Man. © Ani he fs a nice guy, and all, But the next time he asks me and my Boss te go riding, my Boss can go for both of us, I will tell the Bumpy World! $ LO. EVERY WHERE RYZON BAKING POWDER you use /ess RAZOR BLADES SHARPENED AYRES JEWELRY CO. 133 S. Center St. Greeting Old and New Customers American Queen Corsets ORA L. CARGILE Phone 1911-W Successor to Minnie Rafferty Flakes.” the name “Kellogg.” . lished in the paper. apparently | ch} cement But tanned Sertember sports a dog. bet ~— WIN'A CASH PRIZE $5.00 First Prize. $2.00 Second Prize. $1.00 Third Prize. - For the best poem on “Why I Like Kellogg’s Corn Accompany poem with clipping of package showing Leave poems at Tribune Office as prizes will be award- ed by the Tribune, and the winning poems will be pub- Contest ends September 20th. Here is a good chance to test out your poetical genius and the good qualities of Kellogg’s Corn Flakes. = he will shoot us around —/