| Show Morning - Fuutla 14 A rf Ijc iTllc Behind the Scenes of Current News i Salt fake rilwitc— “ Established April iuued tYery morning i by 1871 15 Tribunt Publishing Salt L)c Company cf Associated Press It exclusively entitled tn th Thu Tribune Is ft member o( the Associated Press The us for reproduction of all nevea dispatches riedued ro It or not othrrwls credited In this paper and ftlao published herein the local ne Salt Lake City Vtah Sunday Morning August 13 notr that Utah as whole is prcpaiing to make a conceited on campaign against unneressaiv death the highways of the state At the call of Governor Henry II Blood one hundred and twenty five civic and business leadtis met at the capitol Hildas to launch a pei manent oiganiation for the piomotion of tiafftc safely The movement is whole some and ptomising and should t exult in a much lower death late in tiaffic It Is to tie omt mix ltd howevei thit tiaffie safety Is esstntnlly a lot al pi oh lem and that the full metsULe of success cannot be had without the utmost coopeia lion of the people ami the officials of the other units of government The state organization nevertheless can do much to coordinate and aid local and community efforts Leadership participating in the forma tion of the state tiaffic council iccogmcs ihe vital need of this cooperation as well as the necessity for continuous activity and etcinal vigilance Traffic safety is not n matter of day t6 day cnfoi cement or pe nodical campaigning Rather it is the net Jesuit of constant application of the rules of safety on the part of the public con tinuous cnfoi cement of traffic laws and regulations and perpetual study and plan lung for the futuie In adopting a nine point ptogram the state oiganization In a broad way cm braces the whole field of traffic safety Generally speaking the piogiam covers the three E's of traffic safety engineering enfoteement and education Progressive results are dependent of course upon specific actions under each of the classification for it has long since been dis covered that traffic hazards are eliminated by actions and not by words The state council no doubt will set It self to these specific tasks with as little delay as possible It will soon comprehend that it has a big job In front of it and one which will not be completed for many years At the outset it will be confronted by the necessity of seeking some soit of an accord in the judicial minds of the traffic courts — Tiaffic violations In so far as the law Is conceined are more or less common of fenses in all parts of the state In other words speeding Is or should be much the same offense In every county Going thiough stop signs lgnonng traffic lights Pnd signals leckless or diunken driving all seem to carry the same potential dan gers whether the offenses occur in Salt Iakp or some other county Justices of the peace seem to accept this philosophy completely only when there are accidents When there is no accident penalties range from scoldings up all depending on the personal viewpoint and the disposition of the judge We are glad to see the committee set this down as a hazard to safety in Utah We hope they can convert the judges to the thought that traffic violations cause accidents and that the offense rather than the result should be punished W'hcn this philosophy Is accepted it will not be difficult for traffic judges to arrive at something of a uniform minimum penalty for When judges are not traffic offpnses agreed on the seiiousness of a traffic vlo lation the public is bound to be confused about traffic regulations under diffeient jui isdietions This is but one of many things con fronting the counnl in its scan h for greater safety There aie mam othti haaids to be eliminated The oigami tion will need and Is entitled to hive t he Widest degree of public suppoit Tiaffic office! s and ludges motonsts and pedestrians as well as puhlic and nvie officials must recognize that traffic death is a common pioblem to be solved bv a umi W’e commend th it suppoit mon effoit fm the new oigamation in the hope tint fewer and fewer deaths will occur on t ho highways of Utah is heat toning 1o su-p- ei tax the veiy strongest nerves The foicgoing report of Jlitlei’s mental bieakdown calls to mind the anonymous publication a few months ago of an authenticated account entitled 'The Stiange Death of Adolf Hitler" The American publishers of this manuscupt attest their author's claim that Hitler died September 29 1938 on the eve of the Munich pact but In order to avoid the possible chaos and revolution which might have ensued if the fact of his death wcie made public the news w'as and still is withheld By a strange act of fate the story goes the Fuehrer's famous double Maximilian Bauer almost identical in physique voice and the much-ca- i tooned forelock is carrying on as a puppet under the direction of Goei ing Goebbels et al While U is entirely possible of course that Hitler is either dead or on the verge of insanity it is more probable that he is still alive and merely in need of a rest His impol lance in world affans however and the intensity of sentmunt for which he is the target amply explain the current stones about his personality his whereabouts and his idiosyncrasies Nonetheless the whole matter is a fine example of the interplay of truth and fiction and a nice commentary on the psychological news 1 Hitler 1$ Time to Stop Fires Before'They Start 1$ Regional and national officials of the division of glazing of the U S department of agriculture are thoroughly cognizant of the fne menace now existing on the ranges At a and the public domain of Utah meeting on Fiidav these officials launched a program for 12 more fire lookout stations They also pei fected a ptogram for use of the C C C camps In fire piotection All of this Is commendable action which should have earnest attention of the public It Is easier to prevent fires than It Is to stop them If the traveling public is fullv cognizant of this fact It will exercise gi eater caie with matches camp lues and dgarets when tiaveling over the puhlic domain The precautions now being taken by the grazing officials are in piepaiation for fighting and suppressing fires after they have started The public with a little pre ventlve effort can reduce the hazard to a minimum New York Highlights Charles By B Driscoll YORK — 1939 — Four years ago — August 1933 — Will was 13 Rogers killed when the plane in which he was riding with VV dev Tost clashed a half minute after In noithern Alaska the take-of- f If Will weip living today he would be neat mg lus sixtieth huthdav '1 here is everv reason to believe that he would be doing the hist woik of lus nicer lliat clash cheated ttie w oi Id of v c ai s of i utert moment and w ise counsel bv one of the gieatest entertainers amt w isest eounselois who ever lived Because 1 knew Will during the last 10 vears of his life and woiked with him in a perhaps mv readeis plot ssional eapncitv will foi give me if 1 attempt to tell a few thin ’s about the eowhov humorist toelav tnst nd of talking about New Ymk My with Will was altogether In New NEW oi k Y almost exactly 10 vats I hmulled hat Will unde riilonal returnee still prevails so far as intimate delails of that relationship aie contented It late permits me to lav aside the riailv eolmnn some dav there awaits the job of writing a book of memories and records Iovvard that have alwavs pieserved documents snaps of paper authenticating evidence In such a book if ever I come to write it I mav be able to give more fully the story of Will Rogers Todav lust a glimpse of a lew of the interesting sidelights that Wills pub- inning (ediledi Fast Becoming A Legendary Figure 1 c 1 No person in tins age or genera1 ion has been so well known if not so important Adolf Hitler chancellor of the third rnch Few people in ail histoiv have ever ricen from obscui dv to the pinnae le of fame so rapidly and noi e has ever coinered the spotlight of publicity so complr'rlv as this e concomHavanan coiporal itant of his mete our i hc houevci is the astounding anav of estimates uimnis anecdotes quips etc which now emulate regarding him in all pnK of the world So much so that the Bac helm of Be litesg ulon has become in fact a legendaiv figtue Many of the tall stones ngaiclmg Hitler are moie oi less exapgn tiled accounts one-tun- of his daily life A recent example is contained in a wneless dispatch to the New Yoik Times dated July 23 at Warsaw Poland reporting Hitler as suffumg "a serious nervous shock and breakdown" According to the Socialist newspapci the Pziennik LucIoav a Vienna specialist now a irfugce in Poland was recently invited to Hitler’s mountain I treat and offcied The a fee of $10000 for Ins services has it tnat duiing a heated conference with his military and pnitv chiefs Hiller collapsed following which his doctors advised him to take a complete lest for several months How ninth of this stoiy is (me and how Muich of it piopaganda is of couisc diffi it interested in Will had the personal simplicity that Is chmactcristic of most people who genuinely create Whatever may be said of him bv his severest erltiis Will did create a stvle a fotm a mode of Interpreting the mind of the soil tiller to the nnnd of the middleman and u u r and le e v ersa lie was never unaware of his fame kor lie v as a showman But he tried to deserve lus fame struggled to mensure up to it amt me vase It lie never appeared In public without neivousness But he never appeared without preparation rehearsal He hail been lic might be v a er (null's in n long before he became a writAnd a vauelevillinn rehearses All shovv-m- e n do Will wrote his daily "dispatch" no malt i vv lie re he was he alvv nv s trie d to find someone' to whom he could lead it lie bled e to lend his gigs aloud or to reeile them e be put (hern on paper It was the same ilb turn when he w is appealing in hosewho vvoi keel wilh him have told me that he loved to gather n fe w ol them nroimel anil nolle what he pen posed to snv In (tie seine Hint was about to be shot He iniely committed his lines to memmv as written bv the seiit writer He liked to ehanpe the wording to add quips to put Will Into the lines W tie n v Copyright 1919 Me Time — Vacation By Orr Scribe Believes Taft Stands Out in CO P Mr Mallon Is taking a vacation from news bv writing purely personal news behind the news (or a two weeks’ period By Naught by mile ale Inc traordinary ’ Debt 'Bad' The other side of an Debt is is a debt a very ‘bad’ word in the folkYet few people realize ways that if there were no debts there would be no investments and It is nothing called capitalism important to keep debt and inassociated vestment closely throughout these hearings Otherwise you are going to get stump speeches on the hoirois of government debt and the sublimities of piivale investment it is equally in older lo talk about the vuUies of government investment and dangers of pi ‘Debt investment ale de lit 'Budget 'Spemling' is a bail' wont Avoid it like a cuppei-lien'lalk about government running expenses and government plant 'Jalk about putting the government budget on a business basis nether Uim about triple budgets m capilil el ls tion has been smoothed out second because of the announcement of his candidacy Now it is true that various polls except in Ohio show Mr laft slightly behind Mr Dewev and Mr Vandenberg in popularity But curiouslv instead of discouraging his friends that very fact encourages them It is their contention that when the odds are against him Mr laft is most formidable and that a this stage thev would rather have him slightly behind than m the lead That sounds a little like an alibi but when you examine Mr Tafts political record it does not seem so For example in 19 ‘3 when he was a candidate for the senatorial nomination few posted observers thought he had a chance Tarty in June both newspaper and political exports agreed he could not win ildl-In- manently lower rale About Monopoly Monopoly : Remember Jerome Franks suggestion for brand-netrims for monopoly and competition to take out the emotional content It might be a good Idea to avoid thise terms as much as possible m this particular set of hearings Font even call Investment bankers Ise lug monopolists directly business — sales over JJOtXHftkt a vear or some such figuie t 'V small business — unde l JJIXH)-(W- THE PUBLIC FORUM - e Forum Rules Many City Laws In this column views of The tba opinions of contributor with which The Tribune The follow mav or mav not aeree Inc rules contribution I 1 elter limited to 2pi0 word and preference clen to ehort com- the mi h mine ill economists will not onlv avoid trouble m ihe investment banning eoming hearings tint mav even avoid telling the senators bankets and columnists know what they are thinking about gov corn West in which he declares police violate laws Thev certainly do and I often wonder where thev are when others are violating tnus Almost every night an aulo parks under mv windows and allows the motor to lunTrom 1 oelook until I have but the noise notified police doesn t stop hat may be a police emergence car but the officers of the lack have no more right to make a nuisance of themselves than I have I have often appealed to police for protection from bullies business men and those who delight m tormenting a cripple and have been abused for asserting mv rights It is rnmmon for police to halt their car on a pedestrian crossing to let a lady tn or nut and I must wait until a light has been changed three times I have several complained times to traffic police of drivers backing out of a garage on me without warning Three times municant na Write leriblv and rlearlv on one aide of th paper onlv I eltcinus 3 and racial dHrus-aion- s of a deroraiorv nr serfanan natura are barret! Part aan nr per-- a mat political comment cannot be printed 4 Personal Poetical aspersions prohibnot contribution w ited 6 Letter mav be barred for oh ions mtaafatfrnent or of fact for statement whh are not In accord with fair nlnv and rood taste 7 The Pontm Is not an ader-tttn- e medium and cannot be used for ad'erttaina ourpnaea R Writer must sicn true names and addresses In Ink Jetler will be carried oer assumed name If writer so renuesfs In all caie however true nmt and address mint he attached to enmmunlrstlnn 9 The Forum cannot consider more than one letter from the me r wr o ie iim 10 The Irlhme cannot accent leiters for publication which bear libelous nr actionable remarl a entail S tolnt legal responsibility 4am 1 in 'Ihe Bridge (lull Meets (Ills there s one thing III never he able to understand and that is vvhv that Mr Wallace — you know the one 1 mean lie s not Hinted to anv of the Wallace! out heie except bv politics - he s sc eietarv of ngric ultuie or have bumped me but I been told "There s nothing you ran do about it" I am not blaming all our police some of them are real gentlemen There is not a day that I don't something back in Washington -when lie wax busy plowing under eve iv other this and that vvhv lie (Inin t plow under all of those tasteless cantaloupes' What do the faimeis imse that kind fm nnvvvnv7 Ivvouldnthe surpuscd if thev did It just to in dale citv pewple Really girls 1 dob t believe there Is a wav to tell whether a cantaloupe Is good without openkven ing it up and tasting it If a person was a claiivnvant I don t believe he could toll Mv husband says a good wav Is bv the smell I vv nuldn t know about that because just when the melons start to come in mv hay Mav he its r confever starts spiracy' or something' And another thing that makes me sore Is the way they hnve of picking fruit and vegetables while thev re green and letting them ripen in cold storage 'lake tomatoes for instance when they begin first to ship them in fiom California and places Thev look lovely but thev don t hnve anv more taste than a rag rug And Whv I saw pe aches and pears' some the other dav tliut you couldn't blast vour wav Into And watermelons— well 1 ve given up try ing to pic k one of them 3 cm do what mv dear7 'thump t he m ’ Snv I ve done ev erv lung loit use a si et hose ope on the Just the other dav 1 tilings' thumped one and it sounded like ll hut a hollow i In st so took it It looked Inv inand l sole loo Do you suppose waterin' Ions nit allergic lcclhmpslhit " on know lake j low in tr bv oil lion flcvor like bolter does In Hie b box whin vouie not 7 n fill what vim put next lo Will If thev do III bet that wntermehm piew up In r cucumber pntch But when our own fnilts and vegetables me on Hie mniket 1 make up lor lost time I c l c c r 11 Who dealt last7 Rf NDFZVOl’S Put on mv new flowered hat — Blue skn kasten Ah s abov e me — mv vcllovv frock — be vv ill love me1 small slippers — in bliss When down a shaded path Roveix may kiss Saucy Hurling Thomas Mr Taft was told all that too and it had the same stimulating effect similar news had in the primaries When Mr Day his primary opponent plumped for Senator Bulklev Mr 'raft iust put on more steam and was elected by 170000 majority “ Russia Is not a republic It is a dictatorship— the worst the world ever has seen They have aboland freedom ished capitalism Our and brains are penalized constitution says that all men shall be protected to the right If of life liberty and property you destroy the right of property you abolish capitalism freedom and demotrac y — all at one stroke and bring dictatorship William Mathrus in Russia would not be permitted to free lus nund the wav he does in the United States if he were opMr posed to the government Mathrus seems to be honest but he doesn t comprehend socialism or he would and communism w rite diffei entlv L A One dash of powder I ips reddened prim -No hour so sweet as this — Dressing for him' -- Judv Shea Notes on the Cuff Department shop-'WSign in neighborhood Doctor Shoes We Heel Them W e Attend to 1 heir Dyeing and We Save Their Soles'" e Dave Coursey savs there! R fellow In town who has had a bicycle shipped here from k ngland It is equipped with gear shifts f— hill climbing and all kinds of gadgets Sounds like mutinv against the gasoline companies to me four-seal- Harrv Joseph was seen on Main street rerently Said he d e just returned from a Things must trip somewhere he looking up for the Republicans Harrv is lighting his tlgars now 1000-mil- Must he tough to be like Sul Fox and have to worry about which to automobile have brought up for you to drive home Yep It must be awful tough to be like that Bead about the city commissioners being shoit on parking went down to look sprue so the situation ovc r k omul pic nty of space on the south side of komth South street between State and Second k nst sheets at o rents per hour they put the pmking metcis In so whv don t thev patronize home Industry Instead of talking about renting parking spare7 Thev re no heller than the rest of us doggone it 1 Norman another tery 1 he Imported kind can t compare I beg your pardon with them mv dear" Your husband makes his living shipping in things7 Well don t apologize— it isn t your fault ‘ savs that ' socialism has not been established in the U S S R " He is right but it is as near socialism as the laws of nature will permit And it is so near to socialism that it Is an absolute tvrannv and executes anyone that dares to run counter to the planning Even Maxim Litvinoff resigned and the world is wondering what has become of him It probably will remain a mys- they have t ‘ seems to be a crime with Mathrus and the man who is shiftless with no ambition and lazy should be held as high as the man w ho has capacity Men are not Treated equal Nome cxrel in one line and some Senator From Sandpit- Oft expectation fails and most oft there whore most it promises —Alls Well That k nets Well In Julv the people who In lime had said he could not win wore saying Bob has made progress He has gained strength every day and he may pull through ” Well in the August primaiy Mr laft won bv the emphatic majority of 70 000 and then had to start in on his general campaign with practically the same situation that existed at the start of the primary fight In September his loval friends talked this way Y’es Bob surprised them in the primaries He got off to a bad start and his nomination was a triumph But he is up against it now It isn t onlv that Senator Bulkley is personally indorsed bv the president and has the VV P A and thd whole administration set-u- p behind him but the primaries left a lot of bitterness Day won t support him He can t win " Defends Those Who Accumulate Editor Tribune- - William Mathrus asks me a few questions He asin the Tribune Forum sumes too much that a man ran t accumulate property honestly Because a man is frugal and uses good judgment and prospers 2 ited ’ see an officer run his car through an amber or even a red light without warning and this isn t half my story Andrew A Van Brunt th xpri Thev art not Inbunt Iditor Tribune I read with Interest a Forum letter by L J by Our Readers Lettera apprarh rto V It Is a - - Says Police Violate 1 ‘I n pit ilism is a fighting word Also the prolit s Avoid it tem Ise ‘our conomv or our In private his Actually campaign managers and members of his own family conceded defeat ' Bob” they said in effect is a fine sincere man and would make a grand senator but he is not a good campaigner The other fellow is running away with him It is too bad but he is in for a licking Thc-even conveved this cheerful point of view to Mr Taft himself Did it dishearten him' Did it slow him down7 It did not On the contrary that kind of talk in his own camp stiltoned him as nothing else had and he went at it harder than before ‘ muxliv "If spending must be dise usseel r always remembe i that every spent bv the government is usually a dollar ot sales on the books of some business m in Keep spending firmly associated with sales wages purchasing power — all good words k conomy is a beautiful wmd Visions of thrifty Inele Abner rolling balls of waste string k conomv however means a loss to somebody else— loss of sales or wages Keep economy and loss firmly associated ‘Economic system A mature economy is one where the demand for a new plant is declining not to ze ro hut at a per- development the Messrs Dewev Vandenberg and Taft naturally are of great public interest At the moment attention is rentered more on Mr Taft thnn on the other two-f- irst because his embarrassing Oluo situa- ‘Savings is a ‘good’ word tenderly regarded on the folkways it As used in these hearings means the share of an Individuals annual income which is not spent for lonsumers’ goods and 'Ihe sum of such inservices dividual savings is ‘national savings’ "Investment: This Is a 'good' word but a loose and slippuy one Serious confusion arises unless the speaker makes clear whether he is talking about a phvsical investment — stuff you can kick with your foot or financial investment — stuff von can crumple in your hand kor phvsical investment 1 suggest the term ‘plant or plant goods j no new national figure can he built up in nine months and ‘dark horses’ who be- - 1 rank R Kent come nominees are so rate as to be negligible This being the case thp personalities of have to read but it will be All important worth the eflort parts of the document are here repeated In order vestment’ is a good word 'When found savings disappear and investments take their If savings are not inplace vested they become ‘hoardings’ or idle money 'Hoarding is a bad word ‘Be enieful of using the term alwavs remember ‘savings that one context pleases the layman and the other distresses him — the benefactor of industry idea versus the miser idea j J J This is because they are the onlv available party men with national reputations Barring some ex- You may some of it twice Corporations' Practice short - circuit ‘Corporations this practice by withholding dividends and accumulating corporate savings' Thus they sequester money which stockholders might have gotten as income ‘Individual savings are deposited in 'savings reservoirs —Insurance companies trust companies building and loan societies savings banks commercial banks— there to become ‘institutional savings’ "Ihe institutions then try to find investment oppoi tunities tor the funds intrusted to them ‘In- — Van-denbe- rg ten sv si m ee onomie it h mu h adv ii e Kent R the Republican presidential nomination is worth more next vear than since 192S the other that the Repub- lican choice is limited to three men — Mr Dewcv of New York Senator of Michigan and Senator Taft of Ohio WASHING I ON — 'Ihe deception in words which Is offered the public daily by statesmen ahd economic arguers Is exposed in an unpublished memo by Stuart Chase the semantics pursuer It is being circulated privately In the economists trade here and originally was Intended to keep those government econo- mists who will testify at the antimonopoly committee Investigation banking hearings from At saying the wrong things least it tells them how to ay unpopular things In a popular wav oi -- you might say— the wrong things In the right way Rut in doing this the brilliant author seems to have composed a document more revealing of new government purposes than anv outsider tould have writ- bud-ge- Frank WASHINGTON— Two things In national politics reasonably clear for a long time have been made more so by the recent session of congress One is that By Paul Mallon cult to say Such a report from Poland at the moment emanating too from a Socialist newspaper suggests thfit the wish On the may be father to the thought other hand it is not unthinkable that Hither may be showing signs of what after all has been a teirible stiain upon his The depoise and seienity mands which modern life imposes upon a dictator are such as to call for almost human endurance The domestic as well as the intei national problems which have faced Hitler since he rose to power a decade or so ago have been such as to Utah Leadership Organizes For Traffic Safety Drive It 1333 Aii$nit 13 1939 Salt CakS'riLnmcmzzr Hollenbeck Tales Issue With Editorial On Scrap Iron Shipments Tribune Your recent editonal on scrap Iron and its purchase bv foreign nations might unwittingly cast a doubt on the validity of a business done hy scrap iron and steel dealers in your vicinity and leave thp impression that scrap is almost entirclv a munition of war The fact is that since the end of the World war we have consumed 514 000 000 tons of scrap in this country in the manufacture of steel of all kinds whereas we have exported only tons In other words we export only three tons for every 100 tons melted down at home Compared with other conynod-ltio- s the export trade tn scrap is negligible In contrast to the domestic end But exports consist of marginal material along sea coasts which would have rusted away and collection and preparation of this material has produced much employment Steel of which scrap ts a raw commaterial Is not a war-lik- e it is estimated that less modity than 6 per cent of it ever finds its wav Into munitions Scrap dealeis perfoim a useful service in returning old to further use ihcv aie me rubers of tliiir I spec ted communities employ over goo There is nothing dramatic about Mr 'laft He cannot "put on an act and he is incapable of political simulation But underneath that bespectacled benevolent appearance there is real ability and an unshakable determination that makes him fight hardest when things look worst In brief he has both heart and brains plus a homely way of stating his views which carries conviction An effort has been made to label him as the most conservative of the Republican availables It ts Interesting that he does not to being called a conservative docs notobject itch to be known as a ‘liberal" which word the new deal inner circle recent banned as having been cheapened bv the crackpots and communists In view of that perhaps other aspirants will cease straining to be thus known At anv rate Mr Taft has a sense of humor about these tags He could not be the son of his father without a sense of humor v Copv Ofl right 1939 The Baltimore Run the Record hat with the risis and this visiting hark and forth Britain and Prance were never so close and wise channel swimmers will taka advantage of the shortened course VV e Already a pet fancier in Indiana has paid out rewards totaling more than $300 for tha return of a disappearing dog But any recovery policy is like that Green is restful to the human spirit a color psv chologist says Particularly if one' approach shot lands squarely in the middle of same If washing the car or forgetting the umbrella wont bring rain a westerner offer the sure-fir- e solution Begin an outside painting job A sand blaster in the west advertises that he 'launders" high buildings In 20 years in the business he has yet to return th wrong skysrrapef A cave-iIn the West Virginia mine country stopped a ball game in progress on th surface The gams was called on account of n no ground The Kansas incident of the egg Insul another egg is nothing Only lately w halved an early cantaloupe and found cantaloupe Tills cant go on forever One of those days history will go ahead without consulting Hie axis inn-tci- and 111 an av vear will bundle upward of OIK) tons of s i up pi iw l u ally all of which Is for domestic use Very trulv votirs 000 persons Mwin U Barringer I'xcc ul iv e Sec r larv Institute of Sc rap Iron and stee New York August 2 1919 Silence Is that large empty stuff which gleets anv offer to Ihe axis bos to mediate an Issue in the interest of pcae top bruize plaver in Ins ( amulian is a hoc Icev star in the wmler months Such a man must live in hu shin guards A mm-mnni- tv New Yoilc town speaks ot hiring doorringers In go out after delinquent taxes Halloween without the gala note A bell Or Released hy N A N A Inc |