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The city no longer promotes its Halloween alternative, but Des Moines City Clerk Diane Rauh, a lifelong resident of central Iowa, said for as long as she can remember Beggar's Night has been on Oct. 30, the only night kids trick-or-treat in Des Moines. "Not having lived anywhere else, I'm not sure what the traditions are elsewhere. Do you just ring the doorbell and they give you candy?" Rauh asked. "We make you work for it in central Iowa." She said the practice is especially confusing to new residents. "They just kind of look at you," Rauh said. Anna Karr, 9, of Des Moines, and her mother, Tamara Rood, were getting ready this week for Beggar's Night by shopping for a costume. Anna hadn't picked a joke yet, but figured she would look one up in an encyclopedia for jokes.
Her mother, who grew up in Ames, north of Des Moines, said she remembers telling jokes for candy when she was a child. "I always thought it was fun," Rood said, "and I don't think it's too much to ask."
[Associated
Press;
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