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About The Oregon statesman. (Salem, Or.) 1916-1980 | View Entire Issue (Sept. 15, 1942)
PAGS TWO Tl. 0ao:i STATESMAH EaW Orwjon. Taradar Monsto CptensSm 15, ISU Committee OkehsTax Final Bill Includes Individual Credits, - Bigger Direct Tax . (Continued rrom Page 1) $500 for single persons and credits for dependents cut from $400 to $300. ' " ,- 3. New credit allowed against . income , tax for all medical ex ... penses In excess of 5 per cent of ' net income, with a maximum of $200. . - " Corporations: . ' - , 1. Present gradaaied excess ' profits tax from 15 U ft per - cent replaced by flat M per '-' cent tax, retaining present sped-; fie exemption of $5009 in profits not subject to excess tax. Aver ae earnings base revised by r . insertion of reliefs prevision. v Invested capital base reduced for larger, corporations. 2. Normal and surtaxes on larg .er corporations .increased from present combined, total of 31 per cent to 40 per cent. 3. Post-war rebate and debt de duction credit of 10 per cent of the total amount of excess profits taxes. - 4. Capital stock and declared value excess profits taxes elim Inated. S. Over-all limitation of 80 per cent of net income placed on cor v poration taxation. ' 6. All corporations placed on calendar year, basis for taxation. ; Miscellaneous: .Excise taxes increased on II- , ouor, beer, wines, cigarettes, ci gars, lubricating: oil. photogra phic apparatus, train, bus and plain fares. 1 , Interest from future issues of - state and nraletpal bonds made . . taxable. . In approving , the victory levy . of 5 per cent, the senate com- mittee turned down at least two .' substitute proposals. One of these, offered by Sena- tor Byrd (D-Va) would have linked a treasury proposal to place many taxpayers on a "pay as you ; go basis with a 3 per cent re tail sales tax. Chairman George ' (D-Ga) announced it. was defeat 1 ed 11 to 8. The 3 per cent levy as approved by the committee is in addition to the regular income taxes and sur- 'V taxes.. '-; :- if' - ;' In reducing the combined rate on corporation normal and surtax earnings to 40 per cent, the com mittee also i voted to reduce by about $200,000,000 the amount of post-war. rebates which would be made available to corporations. It previously had acted, to make rebates, covering deductions and post-war Tf r d f t a, V aggregating $900,000,000 and taking the form of a 10 per cent credit for a cor - poration on the amount of sur-tax and excess profits taxes due from It Monday's action, however, lim- I ted the rebate to 10 per cent of the excess profits liability. While congressional tax ex- - perts declined to estimate the - total of new taxes in the bill, ? they said the committee action Monday had . subtracted $327, 090,000 in direct revenue and r .had eut down tho total amount of post-war rebates by $200,- $08,801. - . Thus on the basis of a treasury estimate to the committee Satur day that it had added only $830,- 000,000 direct taxes to the meas ure since it passed the house, the total in new taxes provided in the bill would be $8,774,000,000 I above the yield of present tax .-laws, which provide about $17,- . 000,000,000. "The house had voted to increase the yield by $(L271, 000,000. The senate committee version of the bill, however, provided for the collection of approximately $1,800,000,000 from taxpayers which would later be rebated, $1, 100,000,000 of this amount coming out of individual payments on the 5 per cent "victory tax." - : This would bring' full '. year's . collections of approximately $8, 574.000,000 from taxpayers, in ad dition to the $17,000,000,000 now . Tbeing .-extracted ; from .them by present laws, or a total of $25 .874,000500. -.' s ; 1 ilTV ; "In last minute actions, the com tnittee , approved ; an amendment 'rennittini public" utility .corn-' j?anies,' except railroads, . to de . duct dividends paid . preferred stockholder from income in com muting surtax liabilities, '. It reconsidered previous action - and cut the dividing line-for long "and short term capital gains and , losses to 6 months, instead of the 15 months voted by the house and the 13 months the senate group previously bad established. . . At the . suggestion . of the treasury,- It altered a previous . amendment to call for a report by December 1, Instead of Janu ary 11, 1842, from proposed Joint congressional ' committee -- which would be set up to study the question of compulsory sav ing to aid in financing the war. . The committee approved many excise taxes as previously voted . br the house, including an -increase from $4 to $8 a gallon on liquor. , KOG Group Meets The governor's committee of the Keep Oregon Green association is to meet 'in Salem today, having moved from its usual gathering place in Portland. The session co incides with the .Oregon . Forest Defense council meeting, called for this morning, and is to , be I .eld over the luncheon table at Llarioa hotel. Civilian Defense Office Closed Because of the, call for cannery labor, the Marion county civilian defense office in VFW hall Is not to be open during days this week, Coordinator Bryan H. Con ey announced Monday. - The of fice will be open, he said, from 8 p jn.' for several hours each night. In case of emergency the control center, operated as a part of the civilian defense organization, goes Into service without any activity on the part of the council's office, he explained. en Fertilizer Use Sliced WASHINGTON, Sept. 14-AJ) Use of chemical nitrogen fertilizer for lawns, flower gardens and golf courses was banned by the war production board Monday, effec tive immediately, and its use for agriculture was restricted to the minimum formulas deemed neces sary for basic food requirements. .The aim is to conserve nitrogen for necessary foods and explosives, especially smokeless powder.. Coming under complete ban are yards, cemeteries, golf courses, non-commercial plantings of flow ers, shrubs . and trees. Commer cial florists and nurserymen may use it for propagation of trees, shrubs and flowers and for com mercial cut flower sale, on their own establishments, but not on the premises of customers. - Predicting that increased do mestic production of chemical ni trogen and imports from Chile would not exceed 80 per, cent of the agriculture demands,', WPB said the deficiency could be sup plemented with somewhat larger quantities of organic nitrogen. Most important of these is manure from livestock but. other sources include tankage, cotton stems, cotton seed meal, sewage sludge, peat and humus. One restriction provides that fertilizer containing chemical ni trogen cannot be used on grains sown in the fall of 1942 to be harvested as grain. The restric tion does not apply if the grain is used as a pasture or cover crop: Officials explained that this was intended to Increase meat produc tion. ; v, Rails Blocked After Blasts i : CRESTON, Isu, Sept 14-flP) TBI agents, railroad detectives and otfier law enforcement offi cers Monday night blocked off the' area approximately ( three miles east of Nodaway, la., where early Monday a series of 12 ex plosions rocked the Burlington railroad's westbound Zephy streamline train. James L. Dal ton, head of the FBI in Iowa, whose office is in vestigating the : explosions, had not disclosed their cause. The blasts, which caused at least one passenger, : J.- H. Sheridan Omaha, to believe the train "had been hit by lightning," caused no injury to the 187 passengers. Bail road officials said no cars left the track. 72nd Ship Launched PORTLAND, Sept 14-ff)-The SS Henry Villard, named for the noted journalist and capitalist who. figured in Pacific northwest railroad development, went down the ways Monday at Oregon Ship building corporation, the yard's 72nd liberty ship. r Former Editor Dies PORTLAND, Sept 14-Fred crick W. Bell, 66, former, city edi tor and longtime copy editor of the Oregon Journal, died Sunday in the plunge of his automobile into the north Yamhill river near Sheridan. Three Leave Home State police, were on the look out Monday for three young Inmates-who reportedly-ran away from; the Fairviev home about 10 o'clock Sunday night The run aways . are Charles Douglas, 1 1, Harvey Burns, 10, and Harvey Saiegon, 14. . . ; 'Enemy Held Of f 7 ; rUKILAND, Sept 14-()-In a practice anti-invasion maneuver, 650 Oregon state guardsmen fought a successful delaying ac tion in the Wilson River area Sun- day. y i., t Blarney Inspects GEN. MacARTHUR'S HEAD QUARTERS. Australia,, Tuesday, Sept 45-()-Cen. Sir Thomas Blarney, commander in chief of allied land forces in the southwest Pacific, returned to Australia Tuesday after inspecting allied troops in New Guinea. i Rectal Soreness Ctt Relief flaw Easy Way Sit In Comfort: j. Dual tWt Hcfcy taw trekca Mta round rectum. Fw place art to infection. A nick depcadabi actWw ( nctai wxrCTW iaPno-UNnoaKcrUO. Brines ootiiing mm of comfort vpoa contact, on protecting Aka rcr mar mrtm. help destroy tnf cetioua mt aUa Katara aaal up raw, brokea tiaroca. No oil DO gi mi to ttsin elothimt. Sold ob vaoavy back fvar. knte. CUt thia modcra latiaT todr...ak foi prrsLAnr-on hzctal FRED JILYEIt DHUG SECTIONS ToT- mirog Senators Aver Planes Inferior 'Brass Hats' Charged With Failure to . Provide Best. . (Continued from page 1) : in explaining why his commit tee approved his bringing the matter up for debate. Senator Lucas. (D-Ill) said he found it difficult to understand "why they send boys out in a plane which can fly only 120 miles an hour to ; fight against better planes." Wallgren, a member of a sen ate military affairs subcommittee which recently investigated Alas kan defenses, said a plane of mat type was sent out . to bomb the Japanese at Kiska. Wallgren said the United States had "the world beaten' with, re spect to bombers and interceptors, but discriminated against fighters. " We talked with s great many men who have been fighting the Japanese and men who have been fighting on other fronts," Wallgren declared. "They told us that if it were not for their ability to outshoot the enemy, they would have been defeated, because they feel that the fight ing planes ' of their opponents can outfly them," -. Wallgren said tho Japs were using a Zero fighter equipped with pontoons which" is forcing Ameri can bombers up to an altitude of 20,000 feet where they lose effect He said American fighters had better armor protection but It made them less maneuverable. 'Our pilots are asking' for a better plane," he declared. "The navy is using a plane today in Alaska which to my mind Is a joke, not being able to do better than 120 miles an hour." While he said the Americans had some "good planes" such as the P-39, P-40, the Mustang and the P-38, "none of them seem to measure up to the fastest planes which England is producing at the present moment." Senator Norris . (Ind-Neb) said he saw no reason why "Great Britain should not be supplied with Spitfires made in this coun try and no reason why our boys should not have them to fly." Truman declared WPB's "faulty distribution" of steel was "imperiling the whole war pro gram" and declared WPB Chairman Donald M. Nelson should appoint "a two-fisted, competent man" to remedy ma terials.::' . 1 - He deplored "lip service" re sponse to committee -criticisms of the war production program and questioned ,whether the high mili tary and n aval officials were operating in tho necessary unity that should have followed the tragedy at Pearl Harbor. He said the report by the mfli tary affairs subcommittees Indi cated a lack of a unity of com mand in Alaska, "in particular. During the course of the day. he offered a resolution asking sen ate authority to expend an addi tional $100,000, if necessary carry on its defense investigations. Adolph 'Critical' The condition of Joseph Adolph, member of the- firm of Rostein and Adolph and a prominent Sa lem citizen, '.was reported by Sa lem Deaconess hospital Monday night as very critical. Adolph was taken to the hospital Sunday aft ernoon following a sudden illness. Jewelers Appeal. PORTLAND, Sept 14-(A-Ore-gon jewelers, appealing to con gress in their annual convention Sunday, predicted that t b. e y, might be forced out of business unless domestic silver prices were reduced. Helsinki On Alert BERLIN (From German Broad casts), Sept. 14-iAVThe Finnish capital of Helsinki underwent its 200th air raid alarm Monday when soviet planes tried to penetrate the city's defenses, the Berlin radio said Monday night. ' No bombs were' dropped, the dispatch said. Doctors Elect" . PORTLAND, Sept l-P)-Dr. Thompson Coberth, The Dalles, was designated president-elect of the Oregon State Medical society Sunday. He will take office next year. Atlee in Canada ST. JOHN'S, Newfoundland, Sept I4-(ff)-Clement Atlee, do minions secretary in the British government, arrived Monday night for a 10-day visit In Newfound land after which hewill proceed to ; Ottawa for . conferences with members of the Canadian govern ment. V-v;..; i Last CORSICAN BROTHERS' with Douglas Fairbanks, Jr. Plus Mystery Comedy GRACIE ALLEN in M3. St MRS. NORTH, : Also Our Gang Comedy and News La ugene Assailant Takes Own Life EUGENE, Ore- Sept 11-tfV Walter O. Vanatta, Eugene drug gist, was slugged and critically injured at his store Monday by an attacker who later committed sui cide In the county jail. Policeman Ray Never said the attacker was Eugene R. Burch, 32, who broke a plate glass door in a cafe next to tho drug store with his fist - Privates Give First of Two Shows Here They're just soldiers now; but all members of the Camp Adair all-star show cast have been pro fessional stage and radio enter tainers - and this was clearly apparent' to the audience of 500 or more which attended their first showing in Salem, .Monday night in the high school auditor ium. yThe curtain will rise on their second performance tonight at 8' o'clock and oh the basis of reports which the "first nlghters" are certain tor spread abroad, there should be a capacity audi ence. Proceeds from the two shows are being divided equally between the Camp Adair recreation fund and the Salem defense recrea tion committee. - Singers, musicians and "hot patter", artists appearing on Mon day night's show were Pvts. First Class Andy DahL James Manten- band, Henry Schaf er, John Walsh, Nick Sansonia and Angelo Cala kese, and Pvjs. Thomas Borrelli and Jack Gates. Mrs. Pat Merriam, recreation hostess, was accompan ist for some of the numbers. Pvt Leonard Green, is show director. GOP Sweeps Maine State Balloting By The Associated Press aoame repuoiicans scored a clean sweep of all top offices Monday night, capturing the gov ernorship, a US senatorship and three seats in the national - house in the country's first war-time state election since 1918. Gov. Sumner Sewall, US Sen. Wallace H. White, Jr, and US Rep. Margaret C Smith were re turned to office by more than two-to-one majorities. Robert Hale, outspoken critic of new deal domestic policies, won by 10,000 votes in the first con gressional district, with the in cumbent. Rep. Frank Fellows, re turning to Washington, f ' What ; was ' Expected to . be i spirited struggle for the republi can house nomination from Con necticut's fourth' district turned out to be a convention landslide for Mrs. Clare Booth Luce, auth or-playwright. ' She took the nomination by vote of 84 to 2 after four other candidates, including Miss Viv ien Kellems, industrialist, with drew. Lester Barlow, explosives inventor, got two votes. Mrs. Luce will - oppose Rep. Leroy Downs, democrat, and Barlow, who will run as an independent in Novem ber. Primary elections are on Tues day for both parties in Massachu setts, New Hampshire, New Jer sey, Michigan i and Wisconsin. Connecticut democrats also hold their state nominating convention and Mississippi democrats hold runoff .between former Sen. James O. Eastland and Sen. Wall Doxey Fall Hurts Back Charles Clester. Detroit, em ployed by the US forest service, was in the Salem Deaconess hos pital Monday suffering from back injury following a fall from a springboard to a rock pile. Awards Slated Fifty-year-, buttons are to be presented Dr. W. B. Morse and Frank Lovell as. features of Fri day night's regular meeting Pacific lodge number 50, AF AM. of Mrs. Frank Dies ' -Jc PORTLAND, Sept, ll-tyPf-A heart ; : attack : was fatal to Mrs. Aaron M. Frank, 49, wife of the president and ' general manager of Meier Sc Frank company, Port land department store. . THE DAUCS DUSTERS Missile Puts Woods Afire . Eletal Pieces Found Near Crater by Forest Guard ( Continued From Page 1) lags. Ore. Harking of the bomb fragments : indicated . that . the missile was of Japanese origin. At about six a. m. Pacific war time, September 9, a small un identified seaplane was . observed coming inland from the sea and a -half hour" .later plane . was heard "at the same point headed towards the sea. Due to poor. vis ibility, the plane was not seen on ts westward tap. t t-; 3 At 6:42 aim. Mr. Howard Gard ner, a forestry service observer on Mount Ernfly, reported seeing an unidentified seaplane come from the west, circle, and. return to wards the . sea. He described the plane as a small single-motored biplane with a single float and small floats on the wingtips. The plane appeared to be small and of slow speed. It had no lights. no distinct color and no insignia was -visible. It is possible that a plane of this type might have been carried on a submarine. About 11 a. m. Pacific war time September 9 an army pa trol plane reported sighting an unidentified submarine about SO miles off shore in the same general vicinity. The submarine was bombed by the airplane with unobserved results. At about! 1220 p. m. Pacific war time, the same day, a small fire was observed about three miles south of Mount Emily. In vestigation by forestry patrols who extinguished the ' fire dis closed a small crater about three feet in diameter and slightly more than a foot in depth. The earth appeared to be scorched and ex amination of a crater and the area in the vicinity revealed about 40 pounds, of metal fragments and a number of small pellets. The frag ments disclosed markings of Jap anese ideographs which may have been part of a code indicating the arsenal where the bomb, w; manufactured.. A search of the area : has failed to reveal' the presence of any other indications of bombs having been dropped. Second Geiger Bomber Found SPOKANE, Wash, Sept. 14-) Ground parties . which left the Walla Walla army air base early Monday have definitely ; estab lished -that a plane found . down Mir Enterprise. -Ore-' is the se ona air zorce Domner missing from Geiger field here since last Thursday, base headquarters re ported Monday. No other, information concern ing, the big bomber was available in the first message, however. Earlier Monday, base public re lations announced members of the crew of the missing ship were: First Lieut. R. E. Pinneo of Denver. Second Lieuts. A. F. Di Menna, Newark, NJ.; Peter Knud sen, San Jose, Calif.; R. A. Four- nier, Hadley, Mass and J. W. Zurich, - Litchfield, Comx, and Corp. R. C Raschka, La Port, IncL, and Pvt.' First Class G. L. Schaf fer, Milwaukee, Wis. Police to Form Navy Specialists WASHINGTON, Sept. 14 W The navy announced Monday creation of s new class of special ists, to be made up of former policemen assigned to shore pa trol duty." Yi'T.:: ;".a ,,v :Y - Men with 15 years police ex perience and previous military training, the navy said, would be given ratings as chief specialists with pay : of $128 a month plus keep, or an allowance of $2.75 daily for food and rent Men with ten years police experience and military training will be rated specialist, first class, with pay of $114 a month plus keep or allow- BMitMa- mm - 1 ummt unes x oui Joan Lcdxs ances. Those with six year po lice experience can be special ists, second class, pay $35 a month plus keep or allowances, and those with two years police experience, specialists, third class. $78 monthly, plus keep or allow ances. Rites Today For Victims Of Accident INDEPENDENCE, SepU U Funeral services for Leota Gar net Hubbard Williams, 33, and for Richard ? Franklin Ogle, 62, who died as the result of injuries received last-week in an auto mobile accident, will be held here at 2 o'clock Tuesday, ', j Mr. Ogle was killed: instantly when-the car, in which the two were riding with Mrs. Ogle, was struck headon by an Oregon Elec tric freight train four miles east of town on the Marion county side of the Willamette river. Mrs. Williams died Saturday at a Sa- em hospital. Mrs. Ogle was cxit cally injured but Monday was reported to have spent a restful day at Salem General hospital where she and Mrs. Williams were taken following the accident Funeral services will , be held from Smith-Baun - mortuary and Rev. L. H. Vickers will officiate. Burial for Mr. Ogle will be at the IOOF cemetery in Independ ence and for Mrs. Williams in the Evergreen cemetery at McMinn- Ville. :- - - . -: 4-. Mrs. Williams was born at Em- mett, Ida, December .24, 1918, and had resided in this commun ity for the last IS years. She was married to Jerald .Williams, at Vancouver, Wash, April 18, 194L Survivors -are her' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Hubbard, Inde pendence; her husband, Jerald Williams, US army; five sisters, Mrs. E. V. Guderson, Portland; Mrs. C J. Montague, Mrs. Hugh Yoast, Mrs. Willard Lawrence, Independence, and Mrs. . Pete Hiebert, Pedee; three brothers, Carl Hubbard, Independence; C E. Hubbard, Hoskins, and H. 7. Hubbard, Portland. - Mr. Ogle was born at Quitman, Mo, February 28, 1880, moving to Nebraska i with his parents when a small boy. He was mar ried to Vernie Belle Johnson in 1903. - - Survivors are his widow, -Vernie Belle Ogle of Independence; a son, Carl Ogle, Agate Beach; a daugh ter, Mrs. Peter Stoltenberg, Dal las; his mother, 84 years of age, Independence; two sisters, Mrs. Cora Grooms and . Mrs. Ethel Copeland, Sparks, Neb.; two brothers, William Ogle of Salem and Charles Leroy Ogle of Val entine, Neb. Mr. ; Ogle came . to Oregon in 1907 and had resided in this community for the past 35 years. Drowns in River OREGON CITY, Sept. 14-4P) Drowning took the life of Joseph B. Southwell, 19, Molalla, Sunday. He was swimming In the- Molalla river near Mulino. I i NIYIISHUTPS 1-1 N PFTOOAYI V ' N hi ' ' ' ",l,ril ,. Z!ZZZZZZZZ Coast Spots Small Plane S Seacraf t Soars Low Orer Brookings During Fog V Continued From Page l) 4 singled out for attack could not be explained, - J apanese , exported log exten sively - from the Chetco - river country -and exporters often had their own: merr buying, logs i and arranging for-rafting them down river. , They had plenty of oppor tunity for mapping the moun tainous land if they chose to do The region Is heavOy timbered. mountainous and sparsely settled. No highways extend into the in terior and there are few trails. It took a fire crew 4 hours to get to the scene of the bombing from a forest lookout station. ' Gardner, who knew a shortcut through the dense growth, reach ed the flames within two hours and had things under control by the time the crew arrived. . Tom Page, Brookings resident, said he heard an aircraft engine and rushed out to see s small sea plane with a single pontoon break through a heavy fog bank ! and come in over Brookings very low. fThe plane continued : inland. but it was Impossible to follow its course because of clouds banked against the mountains. . "From the sound of the engine, it apparently made a circle over the mountains in the area where the bomb fragments were discov ered and headed back out to sea. "The plane came back directly over Brookings, still flying- low." He estimated that the time from the first sound of the plane com ing in until It faded out on the return to sea was about 20 min utes. Jap Carrier Possibly Sunk (Continued From Page l) i on the spot by an Associated Press reporter from personal observa tion and from all the available of ficial Information and the reports of pilots who participated in the attacks. '-!-!;: The truth is that we won an im portant victory. . j This was the third great car rier batUe In the Padfie fas' which carrier-based airplanes did almost all the fighting. It compares with the Midway hat tie in the size of the forces In-' vol ved. although the damage in flicted en the enemy was small er than at Midway. As at Mid way and the Coral' ae engage ment, the Japanese lavas leu forces were tamed hack short of their objectives: 1 " v ! In addition to the damage to enemy surface ships listed above, we shot down 98, enemy airplanes on August 24 while losing ordy a few pilots. --'.;VY H While the small Japanese car rier which was hit by our. bombs SALEM'S LEADING THEATRE TERMS IlEr.ir.lED TIIEtl CI A!!D RA1I1ED C0V.7I FROM THE SKIES! Who could ever dream that here' in the midst of breathless thrills, high adventure and swift una- bating action, there would be a place for humor? f But,humor there b rich, warm, unforgettable! i! I 4T ItS CttlTUaYOX THU:?!I sforriny MONTY WOOLLEY RODDY McDOWALL ANNE BAXTER OTTO PREMINGER j; CARROL NAISH and torpedoes wasn't seen to sinl our pilots think there is every res son to believe it went down. ! ' j If this Is so. It was' tks slxfS J enemy carrier seal ts the beU torn. Tha ether firs were th j Kymkaks, in the Oral sea ytxy j 7, and the Sorym, niryu, Kags ( sad Akagl at ISdway Jons 4. j j That leaves, the enemy eigh known j carriers, . the HayatakSj Shokakuv Zuikaku, Hitaka, Juoit yo, Zuihzo, Kasuga Maru an4 either the Ryujo or the Hosho.' - In addition to .the Hosho of Ryujo; the enemy had three largs carriers. In the Solomons battis, of which two may have been dam aged by near misses by navy bombers and army B-17s. Al least one of these enemy carriers Is believed to have lost a majority UX &LM oil UHnn. tters Right On Job ' KOSEBUKG. Sep t 1 f (JT 'Alert air raid warning i syates. Tolunteers reported immediate . iy the tmldentified plane thai presumably dropped an incen diary bomb near r Breekbtgs, Ore, last .. Wednesday, X .f , : , " LleuC R. J. Runyon, a a r e a super f I r, said the plane was spotted on the filter center cen tre! kerd within seconds of its appearance ever the coast. , Tt was an excellent teat, and the system proved fully effective.- RanyM said. !; M r": Continuous Last Times i-t1--: Today RED 8KELTON ELEANOnV .POWELL Ship Ahof PLCS HUMTHKET , BOG ART m The Bis; Shot" Every-1 22c Plus Tax - Tin STARTS 'WED. 2 HITS . aa .w STADTS TODAY SSjOOOrOOO people AriUnt . tm Iht itory im CoilUr" RtW Difftt mnd the best-ellin& nevclt AirSpo