Show 8 Tuesday Morning ijalt £akc tribune iTljc Illuminating Insight Into Human Behavior 4 y monthly distribution of public funds to be by “a 2 per cent tiansactions tax” Some of Senator Downey’s Democratic colleagues have expressed grave doubts as to the wisdom or justice of a “transactions tax” which they contend means a multiple collection on everything consumed It will be interesting to observe the growth and decline of this plan for pensioning age legal dies- of need or ment Unless the essential sum can be raiMdbv some new foim of taxation it is doubtful if there is enough available money in the woild to keep up the payments well-know- fiustra-tion-aggressi- Agitators Not Wanted Deport Disturbers of Peace 1 Townsend Plan Converts Propose a Transactions Tax Believe it or not the Townsend pension plan proposing pa ment of $200 a month to all persons over bO years of ago seems to be gaming ground in both major political camps Senator Lodge Republican leader in conservative Massachuse tts is now regarded as chief spokesman for the altruistic doctor's organization Senator Downey the only Democratic eenator from California m tne national congress has eponlv declaied allegiance to Tnwmsend and unwavriing opposition to all forms of social security as makeshifts calculated to discredit and defeat the $200 The Picture Business has declined since New York Highlights Charles Driscoll B In ciltam areas of Man NEW YORK hattan I have seen the signs for years’ “Metal Spinning” or “Biass Spinning” Signs that say things I don’t understand have a way of making me draw absurd pictures in imagination I Imagined a metal spinning place somewhat like a cotton spinning plant with the molten metal streaming out in fine threads and being woven into armor plate and plowshares Lately I decided to break in and find out about it I picked on one of the rarest The visit was to of the spinning processes the aluminum spinning plant of Russel Wright in lower midtown Russel Wright is a young man from Lebanon Ohio who has startled many a He has origbigwig In the city He was a inated things modes and pans theatrical designer and achieved remai liable effects for several producets a few jcars ago But he has an eye for design in any medium so he began playing with aluminum and mndo a remarkable looking contraption called a bun w aimer for his wile He called It bun warmer because he couldn't think of anything else to call it It is nowr one of the best sellers turned out in quantity by his factory It consists of two aluminum hemispheres so swung on a frame that they form a sphere one ha of whirh swings open or closed to let warm buns in or out One estimate is that building will total $1 800 000 000 or $500 000 000 more than last year Rising prices are feared simo costs are already somewhat higher But the economists hope that such government weapons as the monopoly investigation can be used as deterrents Interest charges are also of first importance and the’lurge available credit insures minimum rates Announcements like those of the Bowery Savings bank and Irving Trust Co in New York Gitv that the rates on F II A loans will be reducid are pleasing signs Railroads’ Capital expenditures are necessary of course to obtain real recovery The railioads ate aiwavs a good indication of While the ra lroad this trend problem is as far from fundamental solution as ever the experts report that the rouls are making more profit on euh dollar grossed Equipment pm chases have been incredibly dclived in recent yeais because of lark of cash and one economist thinks that aiouml $400 000 000 will be spent this year 1940 and Elections for Dreamy w iry d He is generally called dicamy by his friends His wife small dark vivacious is a business woman They make a fine team for work He docs the she attends to business details They havo an apartment in the Concoid hotel in Thcio aie more gadgets Lexington avenue in that apartment than ever adorned the palaces of Rube Goldberg’s imagination Gats have a way of taking charge of a There is a scene rather quietly and casually big gray cat without a name that chooses homegoing rush hour to stretch out befme the n fi eslimi tit counter on the lower lived of Grind Central almost daily Twenty thousand home rushers step over him and he opi ns his eyes to see how nimbi v they do it i Thomas Casinovn the Lambs cat has been immortalized bv J imes Montgomery Flagg A well fid i at has been a fixture at the for many years and has in a bored manner received the pats and compliments of hundreds of literary celebrities blue-eye- fellow of d samlv-hane- 33 v ’ When Rarity Fades Florists are looking forward to an entirely new' phase in the history of that mm h sought flower the orchid With coming of air conditioning growing of ouhids in the home is made possible When house wives learn how to grow their own orchids will the om e rare flower lose its lure’ Ive seen them trailing over outhouses in Panama little considered ni 1 eltut I'm Gopyright McN’aught Syndicate It is not antic ipnted that congress will hav e to ac t w ith reg erd to Llnstein s new Ihw of gravity unless it's a misprint for gravy Until the seismologists offer a mote nttiai-tiv- p for Gilifornms moving explanation mountain we must believe its the lvpsv in it This in w then al si il us of the Gc li ill bt to us retails those dark dux of ”12 vc hi n the check would tome back maikcd 'no such bank" lulcral re- bund c s Fades ' c c de m e " N itnmiil income th s year will 0 be aiouml $hs oiHl UK) lH’0 or UOOOOO below the presidents announced goal The ’spenders” me f now arguing that if tluur earprogiam con Id be completely ned out the national income would rise to a yculy rite of $SI) Olio 000 000 in cr the cucse of 40 Since 40 is the vcir of the national tdcctiors von will hear mm h mote on ths pout bifoic long $12-00- Off the Record c As h cii man M crrim r said iccentiv the administration n iTzc s how unpopular sptiiding is becoming thiough-ou- t the count v zXginuluirc do- pirtment olfieiils rutnllv polled n what they elix-- 1 2000 funurs ked most iibniit i he Nuv De il Ironic allv enough the majority ri plied th tl tne irgi r treasury distui be d them most deficits The spe ink rs fc cr cspeiiil'v that ongre ss vv ill lint ul iituf public works and ollitr expenditures mul they believe the armament program will be verv slow in starting Tho ‘orthodox’ economists on the other hand reach then pessimistic conclusion on '40 because they see little chain o Of a rivival of "business confi- serve by anybody lr-- business private was The sin t v of oicmomi-t- s made shoitly af't r the admimstia-tio- n aunoumid its rei ommenela-tuu- i for rising smiil st unity I he move was designed taxes piimanh to hiuhlm 40 business prospents at i m ding to the tank vv ho pt iv cte st itc mr nts of experts However both were consulted the ' spe inlcps and the orthodox economists ifiium picttv gloomy The test on next veus tiiud will be the ability it is Kgiitd of priv ite business to tike up tho b ic h slack gioup doubts that it cun he done The ‘spenders’ ate ftarful that eongiess will curtail their spendbal-aing program not enough to e the hudit of ionise but suftu it v to dcireise its ‘i sil-do- Graig lirl known as Professor Quiz who enter! mis on the radio is a f norite at clubJ Ive ston him do magic by the yard at the Lotos club and at meetings of the Banshees He was an interpretive darner when youjig and spent a vtar m a Buddhist monasters He is a class player former physician and managed a Boston theitir for a year Outside H irrisburg I saw on a reel lit trip a billboard big enough to annoume the i c us with one sentence painted on it in red’ "God have meny on us” It stands at a cut ve where the reckless may he inclined to run into the ditch on rainy nights In Virginia at a bad spot on a mountain road I saw the shivery sign’ “Wreckers’" followed by the name of the firm that would carrv nvvnv your wrecked iar De- cember from an index of 104 to around 98 but that is a natural aftermath to the sharp increase last year A very sensible economist thinks that the index will rise to around 110 by next December His view on an upward advance is shared by his colleagues and a composite of their reasons for optimism follows Balanced Ever production: since inventories piled up so quickly two years ago there has been fear of a repetition Elaborate charts are prepared at the treasury to watch for danger signs These charts show production in balance against “basic demand” and inventories and prices under fair control Inventories are now relatively low and one studv indicates that the stored goods could be used up m four with five months compared months a year ago Housing: Evetyone agrees that construction offers the real hope ts Russel Wright is a tall thin er renditions similarly m-t- Bit At a cntical period in a turbulent era when international lelations aie anemic and racial tensions strained to the snapping point when professional agitatms and potential saboteurs are viewed with increasing 'distrust when legislators aie contemplating expulsion of all persons whose utterances examples and influence are obviously inimical to the welfaie and perpetuity of this government the application of Harry Bridges a notorious of industrial peace for citizenship should be considered with gieat caution and some suspicion Deportation proceedings have been pending in his case for some time but the secretary of labor has refrained from taking action site assert-- s because of a similar case now'occupying attention of the su- preme court of the nation The request filed in San Francisco this week was the third application for citizenship made by this longshoie leader fiom Austialia It has been some time since trial of the case of Joseph George Strecker an alien communist who took active part in distributing mflummatoiy litiatuie in 1932 and who thereafter was ariaigned for seditious conduct and held fm deportation He will be deported ptowdid the court finds that he exceeded the bet tv asvuied him under the federal rnnstitut on Accotding 1o Secretary fiances Perkins of the labor department Ri idges would have brim sent to Ins inland home jn the Indian ocean long ago had the court decided against Stieckor Under the circumstances it lias lequucd some nerve for Bridges to apply for citizenship and the request should meet with cogent opposition from patriotic citizens There are often varyirg degiees of optimism and pessimism among the govunmmts crystal gazi rs on whether usii illy depending their pet theories on how to revive business are being translated into action About three months ago there was no agreement for example the treasury was forecasting a national income $4 000 000 000 below the figure of But at the other departments this time whether they are “spenders” or not experts at the treasury reserve board commerce and labor departments analyze Estimates indicate that fully $2 000 000 had been collected by 30 organizations in the United States' of America and sent to the clestitule and suffering people of Spain during the two years and a half after the civil war settled down to an appeal ance of a piotracted struggle Disbursements were made impartially and both sides acknowledged the benefits While Germany and Italv supplied men and munitions their contributions merely me leased the misery and devastation The money medicine food and clotning that kept the aged and afflicted the women and children Lorn rlowly dying of hunger and mnn by phildisease weie supplied anthropic people of this republic Approximately $000000 had been sent prior to May 1 1937 and subsequently the sum of $2248094 was registeied with the state department by executive order The next problem to be met by others than will be the location and care of a million refugees By i Ernest Lindley WASHINGTON— Presidential booms breed fabulous tales In recent months no stories have been more engrossing than those about the wizardry of John N Garner There was the tale that John N Garner had solved one of the most persistent problems of the occupant of the White House: How to make grass grow on the heavily shaded front lawn A homely reminder that Mr Garner’s knowledge of agriculture is not limited to angora goats chickens and cactus and that the sago of Uvalde knows more about such practical matters than the president the secretary of agriculture and all the brain trusters rolled into one! The truth seems to be that the promising stand of grass on the White House lawn was born and is being nurtured without any assistance whatsoever from Mr Garner and is solely the product of the long arm of federal bureaucracy reaching out through the national park service Nevertheless simh is the hardiness of a pretty fable that at the Democratic national convention of 1940 Cactus Jack probably will be recommended as the man who can make grass grow anywhere (except of course in the city streets) A second and more interesting tale about Mr Garner is that by dint of a little horse sense he has solved the housing problem Some time ago the word began to be wafted from Uvalde that Mr Garner with his own hard cash was conducting a “housing experiment” About two months ago I became interested enough to make some inquiries at his office The information given to me boiled down to the fait that Mi Garner had built some cheap houses on vacant lots which he owned in Uvalde and was renting them profitably This seemed sensible and worthy of notice too since if Jack Garner finds it profitable to build houses and rent them other hard headed people may be encouraged to invest their capital similarly In Far Away Uvalde By ’4D American Philanthropy Against Autocratic Avarice nazi-fascis- Writer Inquires About Tales Of Jack Garner Ort WASHINGTON— Prospects for business recovery are good for the rest of this year in the opinion of leiding government economists They forecast a gradual and healthy rise in the federal reserve board index beginning next month and cat rylng through '39 However unfortunately they are also agteed that another crisis may be expected in the spring of 1939 laised A valid criticism of social science particularly psychology has been the apparent remoteness of its findings from the life The “Inmain currents of every-dastitute of Human Relations” at Yale university seems to be an exeeption having s devoted list If to some vety pi n deal piob-lemhuman behavior One of every-da- v of the tasks undertaken bv this new research is the job of achieving a relationship between the efforts and conti lbutions of a great vanety of behavior scientists— bipsychologists psychiatrist? physicians ologists sociologists et al in an effort to integrate their researches and to focus their findings upon a common problem As a result of many years of conscientious effort a bnlliant formulation of an enduring problem of human behavior emerges This new unifying concept tui ns out to be an integration of ideas from various sciences containing much of the Freudian system of psychology It has been concluded by the institute's staff at Yale that whenever an individual's natural impulses aie frustrated he commits acts of aggression against the frustrates again t otheis or against himself The general principle is stated thus' Aggression aiwavs indicates This interesting formulation Lustration is fully set out in a new book entitled 'Frustration and Aggression" just published bv the Yale university press Significant among the conclusions are these illuminating insights’ Criminals are persons who are frustrated in their basic drives It appears that there is a (lose relationship between poverty and crime marital conflicts and crime and physical or mental inferiority and crime The Yale scientists are evidently making use of that n Adlerian principle of the inferiority complex and its compensations The authors also explain the present international situation in teims of They argue for instance that Germany’s and Italy's recent aggressions arise directly as a result of their national frustration following the war When seen in this form the theory seems very plausible Indeed it confirms many common-sens- e In each naformulations tion or culture apparently the Lustration finds its aggressive outlet in different ways In Russia for instance the aggiession is directed against the “wicked” capitalists In the United States on the other hands our aggressiveness is much more of an individual affair and is directed toward one another Helpful as this present formulation is It nevertheless has some obvious limitations It would be rather disquieting to feel that all ambition and consti uctive aggressiveness are attributable to frustration Carried to its illogical conclusion such a view would mean that the ideal person or culture is a passive one As so often happens of course everything depends on the definition of terms By By Joseph Alsop and Robert Kintner The Tribune Is n member of the Associated Press I he Associated Prese la exclusively entitled to the to R or not otherwise credited In this paper end also tm for reproduction of all news dispatches credited the local news published herein Salt Lake ( ltv Utah Tuesday Morning April Deeper and Deeper Business Rise New Crisis Seen for ’40 leaned everj morning by Salt take Tribune Publishing Company April 4 1939 Nothing that I learned led me to suspect that Mr Garner had discovered anything new THE PUBLIC FORUM which some of the girls wore were beautiful Then the orchestra Fiom the way they followed their leader I know they had been w ell trained Editor Tribune’ This letter is sent to you in praise of tlirtsplen-ch- d rendering of the opera ‘Her Majesty’s Ship Pinafore” by the students of West high slrool last They played their instruments well in supporting the members found as much enjoyment in seeing it the second time ns I did the first night In my opinion all the details of the opera were perfect It commenced on time and the duration of the opera was just the right length to hold the attention of the audience The scenery was very well chosen and the lighting effects were good I was amazed at the fine beautiful voices of the bovs and girls of the cast I was thrilled as I listened to the singing of the leiding members Their acting was wonderful The vv of tne chorus singing marching and other actions pleased me very much I shoud like to add a few words about the costumes All the bovs and girls in their snilor suits And the pretty looked becoming BENS GOL V bln— I hnd one’ heck of a time getting out of New 111 hot if Orleans this morning I made one start I made a dozen Apparently whin thev laid the town out thov had more n imes than thev had struts so tluv gave each street about three names— Christian middle and surnd smn quier n imes name Like Desire Hope Ticrt too Bourbon and Anxietv Content Burgundy I vv is told to follow a certain street and it would tike me to luglivvav 90 the one I wanted to git on For example suppose it was M un street Well Id start down M un street fiom South Temple and bv the time I was to Se ond South I d be on And whin I got Desire street to Post Otfue Place like as not So it would be Piety boulevard Id circle the block and dart over again I must have done that at hast a half dozen times before I realized what was going on Tht n I k pt riht on going or what thev wanted to call the street and eventually I came to h ghw ly 90 Stine of tne most beautiful homes I hive ever Min are on the shoie drive m Baes ( hnstian Gulfport ami Biloxi Mississippi They look chieitlv out oil the Gulf of Mix co with nothing between them and the sea wall but flowers and trees There aie no hotdog stands or In u Ii nsoits cluttering up fho vvatirs edge suih as you usually find in California There are some splendid high-waand bridges in Mississippi Alabama and Florida but I can’t tell you who built them Judging bv the gasoline tax Id sav the automobile owners flic! but thcie are no politicians takng credit for everything like tluv do in Louisiana One old ro id there parade ling the new one was labeled ‘B 1 I asked what it 1 and e vvas told ‘Before ime upon a long hi idge Missis qipi snu white over tne jsinging river clout know it how the s' it am g Us n line bill It ccMumlv strmk a sour note when wo got about Iwn-ttils We hid to ptv four bit hi ross to complete the uo smg i 111 1 10 bv 4 the of P by be- the second night they all gave him a hearty clap and insisted that he come up on the stage I am proud of the fine way in whu h the faculty and the students rendered their opera I feel they are a credit to Salt Iake City Mary E Bennett Attacks Clogging Of Money System Editor Tribune' It would be fun to watch public reaction if our postal system was operated in the same manner our monetary No matter how is conducted much money (collateral) you have you first have to huv a stamp before a letter can be delivered Now suppose congress passed a law similar to the federal reserve act for the operation of our postal sy stem There would be established 12- - svs-te- m Senator From Sandpit h o The North Anur- icau Newspaper Alliance Inc Copv light the cast I was greatly impressed bv appreciation of the members the opera for their director Melvin Peterson as shown them when as the curtain was ing diawn on the last act of of Friday and Saturdw evenings I was so well entertained the first night of the opera that I also attended the second night and H uy ” - - t dresses Rendition Of 'Pinafore' Praises meant - — By Ham Park Another sour note this time in the New Deal symphony is the rebuff the cotton growing states Whenever I got from congress try to sound off for higher silver rm own vouc sounds a shade off It’s pretty hird trying to key I shou'il have A S do a solo Brown Cuts Bn km in and Jim Ivcrs with me and make it a quai tet I am rapidly becoming 'azalea Down here they conscious" don t sav "How do you like our Or ' What do you climate’ think of our scenery9” The less said about the climate the better Ive never felt so damp in my life and When the sun shines good hard it s like being in a steam bath I gave up having my clothes pressed— ten minutes afterward they look like a relief map of the Painted desert And you can't call muddy old rivers gulfs and bus s' encry ?o clow n here they say ‘Have you seen our azaleas” Well beautiful is too tame a word to dese ribe them T hey re exquisite glorious breathtaking in their loveliness Thev're in full bloom now and while they list all alse seems tawdry and commonplace bv comparison I wondir if yon break out fiom citing sc ifood like vou do fiom eating too many strawberries9 If so Im apt to be one b g rush But I don t eaie any dry now When I can get six big oysters on the half shell for 15 cents and shrimps at about 50 cents a peck what do I rare what happens1 But it would bo just my luck to become allergic to them I usually do to everything I can afford Tomorrow Charleston we will start out for S C going by the way of Tallahassee Florida and Sivannah Georgia I understand President Roosevelt is at Warm Springs Gi but I lmrdly think 111 bother him I'll just wait until he gets baik to tho White House I want to get sort of 'policed' up before I ta'l I need a haircut badly —mv hair hangs our my collar ami mv etrs like Spanish muss lather lire Welshnn didn t do n vorv good job on me be'ore I Ic ft or it s the d rmpness that s making niy roof thatch sprout so by Our Readers privately owned printing establishments one for each band in the nation giving them the sole power to print stamps and would pay 6 cents for each dollar s wot th of stamps they turned out That would he rather expensive and we wouldn’t like it a bit but wait Suppose the printing plants would decide to print only half the amount of stamps we required9 They being the only ones permitted by law to furnish stamps a great shortage would result and it would not make any difference how much money (collateral) you had you would just simply have to wait the pleasure of the printers in order to buy the “necessary stamps” to send your letters as industry is now "com- 000 pelled to wait on banks" to manu- facture a substitute for money Would the public remain passive to so obvious an obstruction to free intercourse in public affairs9 Hardly and (he only reason they do so in respect to our monetary system is because it "seems difficult’ to understand Private operation of our postal system or our monetary system can have no other than like results W E De Witt Questions Allotments In Appropriations Bill Editor Tribune’ Just a few questions inspired bv reading over the appropriations bill as signed bv the governor’ W'hv should the governor be allotted t u ooo to run a house w htc h is provided rent free bv the state9 What servito does the board of loan commsasiotieis render the taxpavets which is worth $341-fi to9 Why should the tax eommission be given $289 000 from the general fund and $497 573 from the special funds making a total of $782 575 to run on two yeara when our entire local si hool district (Nebo) can run two vears on $523 b849 Then one question inspired by watching our lrwinakng bodies in session and talking with them in the hills: W hy doesn’t some body appro- priate sufficient funds to buy a dr and let the presence of alcohol on the breath unseat that member until he A Taxpayer up? Spanish Foi k ts The State of The Nation California a woman It is deplorable that hiding his talents under a bushel is a man who can live In peace and amity with two wives In the small confines of an automobile trailer when he could apply his genius In diplomacy to taking the kinks and snarls out of internal iontri Why the fellow complications could easily persimde 1 it Ic and L Icon to join m a game of (Timcxe chei leers "Don’t Squire Perkins says never lend kinfolks nnv mo' mom y th in vou kin affnid to give Tin " r i ight l‘ i‘t bv i cat urc s Gives Differences Mr Garner's houses are also downtown Some have garages and some don’t At the present time a local builder is duplicating one of Mr Garner's most expensive houses for a contract price of $1531 35 This same builder built one of the two F II A houses for a little more than twice that sum But here are some of the differences: The F H A house has half again as much floor It has the best grade of shingles space manufactured while the “Garner cottage” has the cheapest grade manufactured It has termite shields whereas the “Garner cottage” hasn't It has oak flooring laid over felt and a subfloor whereas the "Garner cottage” has pine flooring without a subfloor The F H A house has three coats of paint and two on the roof’ the “Garner cottage" has two coats of paint and none on the roof The other specifications inside and out vary to about t h cr same degree 1979 Copyright Register and Tribune Syndicate Christopher Bdlopp Says: Newcomers Newcomers are people who rome to live And you get a letter from your neighborhood a friend who lives in the town from which the newcomers have come and the friend says the newcomers are delightful people but that they do not know anybody in your neighborhood and asks if you will please be kind to them So jnu decide to give a little tea and Invite the Joneses and the Smiths and the Browns and tho Whites anti the Greens and a number of otliei couples to meeL the newcomers and most of them accept And when the hour for the tea arrives you have the newcomers stand next to you so that you can introduce them And the Joneses appear and you introduce them to the newcomers and they say and pass on to the refreshments And the Smiths ujipcar and you e them anti they say and pa-- s on to the rc freshments and to join the Joneses And the Browns appear and say and the Whiles appear and say and the Greens appear and say Ami so do all the other people And the Joneses and the Smiths and the Brow ns and the Whites and the Greens and the other couples collect In tight little grempsand discuss eaih others’ children and servant problems and laugh uproariously and have a very good tune as they al) know each other so well and enjoy getting together So that leaves the newcomers pretty much alone But you stick by them and offer them refreshments and toll them how charming all the other people are once you get to know them and congratulate them on having come into what they will find a most congenial And the newcomers assure neighborhood you that tho Joneses the Smiths the Browns the Whites and the Greens all look very at'How-rio-vou-- man pleaded guilty to bigamv charges following his arrest in an auto trailer where police said he h id s t up housekeeping with two w ives one of w hom he married in (li ‘ober the othi r in Fibruarv Officers were told the trio hid bei n living together quite amicably The man told authorities he didn’t know why he mar mod the two women" — Press dispatch Many a man not guilty of bigamy wouldn’t be able to tell the authorities or anyone else for that matter why he married one Copy 1 ’ By Olin Miller “At Long Beach Uvalde is a long way off about housing however and time also can do its part The Garner “housing experiment” is now being described verbally and in print as something which makes all the government agencies and experts look silly Recently one of my col’eagucs wrote a trifle breathlessly that Mr Garner had built 17 houses at an average cost of $1500 per house as against $2700 for a “government F H A house” that Mr Garner’s houses were in the center of town while the F H A house was "a mile and a half out of town ” and that Mf Garner's houses rented for $10 to $15 per month while the F H A house rents for $27 50 In the first place the F H A— the federal housing administration doesn’t build homes It insures mortgages on homes built with It devotes some effort to private capital encouraging private contractors and building supply companies to show what can be done in the way of home building Two F H A demonstration homes have been built in Uvalde According to my information which comes fiom one of the builders one of these houses cost $3255 and the other $3600 includwalks ing garages sidewalks approach gravel dnves grading and for one house indsrapmg Both are in the best residential district of Uvalde— not one and a half miles outside but one and two blocks respectively from the Uvalde high school Bsquir Inc "How-do-you-d- tractive And after a decent interval the guests begin to depart and some of them come up to the newcomers and tell and sav good-bthem what a pleasure it was to have met them and some of them just leave And when they hnvo nil gone the newcomers express their gratitude to you for what you have done nnd tell you that they are going to wrile to your friend nnd sav how kind you have he in to havo introduced them to so many i harming people though as a matter of fait they have seen so little of them that tluv (Ion t know whether they' are (harming or not Christophe r Billopp v |