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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Jan. 30, 1956)
FOUR MEDFORD (OREGON) MedfordWTribune "Everybody in Southern Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune" Published Daily Except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO. 27-29 North Fir St. Phone 2-6141 ROSgRT W. RUHLTEditor HERB GKEY. Advertising Manager GERALD LATHAM. Business Manager ERIC ALLEN JR., Managing Editor EARL H. ADAMS. City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN, Telegraph Editor RICHARD JEWETT. SporU Editor OLIVE STARCHER. Society Editor DALE ERICKSON. Circulation Mgr. An Independent Newspaper O Entered as second class matter at Mediord, Oregon, under Act of MMTCIl O, log I SUBSCRIPTION RATES By Mail In Advance: Per Copy 10c. Daily and Sunday One year 12.00 Daily and Sunday Six months 6.50 Dailv and Sunday Three mos. 3.50 Sunday Only One year 3 50. By Carrier In Advance Medford. Ashland. Central Point. Eagle Point, Jacksonville. Gold Hill. Phoemf. Shady Cove. Rogue River, Talent, and on motor routes: ' ' . Daily and Sunday One year $15.00 Daily and Sundays-One month lis Carrier and" Dealers 5c per copy. All l erms iasn in Official Paper of the City of Medford Official Paper of Jackson County United Press Full Leased Wire MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CiKLUmilU" AOVerxiBinK WEST-HOLLIDAY COMPANY INC. Offices m rew lorit, troit San Francisco, Los Angeles Seattle. Portland, St. Louis, Atlanta Vancouver. B.C. NATIONAL EDITORIAL I ASSOCHTLQN 7 KJ niniiiiiflnma NEWSPAPER, PUBLISHERS ASSOCIATION Flight o' Time Medford and Jackson County History from the files of The Mail Tribune 10, 20. 30 and 40 years ago. 3 10 YEARS AGO Jan. 30, 194S (It was Wednesday) Growth of city results in change of mail delivery service; houses on rural routes, and routes revamped. From Arthur Perry's Ye Smudge Pot Column: Males con tinue to run around without hats in the bracing air. This flirting with pneumonia amazes mem bers of the fair sex with no toes In their shoes. 20 YEARS' AGO Jan, 30, 1936 (It was Thursday) Fruit tree census of orchards In Jackson county under way for - department of agriculture with WPA funds. Medford residents to observe President Roosevelt's 54th birth--day at dance tonight to raise funds to combat polio. 30 YEARS AGO ' Jan. 30, 1926 (It was Saturday) January building permits total $54,101 compared to $12,715 for the same month in 1925. From Local and Personal col umn: Fishing conditions in the Rogue riverj say some of the local sportsmen, are improving. The water is still high, but-has lost the greater part of its tur pidness, a condition which is said to make good steelhead fishing. 40 YEARS AGO Jan. 30. 1916 (It was Sunday) From Eagle Point Eaglets: On account of the continuous rain fnd snow, the roads have become o bad that two of our star route mail carriers have put their rigs under shelter and are using pack animals to carry the mail and he other two are leaving their hacks and using pack horses. The roads are simply awful. Ashland records lowest tem perature of season, 9 above zero. What's the Answer? 1. Largest share of the propos ed $250,000,000 federal school building funds for the first yeas would go to New York, Illinois, California, Texas or Pennsyl vania? 2. If Franklin D. Roosevelt were alive today, he would be the same age as President Eisen hower, or 4, 9 or 14 years older? 3. Germany invaded Russia in World War II before or after the Japanese attack on Pearl Har- bor, or at the same time? 4. Bobby Jones was or wasn't the only amateur to win the U.S. Open golf championship? 0 5. The U.S. House of Repre sentatives now has one, three, five or seven Negro members? 6. The Dodge car is or isn't made by General Motors? 7. Which of. these cities gets more snow in a typical year: Boston, Burlington, Vt., Denver, Minneapolis, Rochester, N.Y.? The answers: 1. Texas. 2. Nine years old. 3. Some months be fore. 4. Wasn't .5. Three. 6. Isn't (by Chrysler). 7. Rochester. POSTMEN STAY WELL Omaha (U.R) Twelve Omaha - postal employes retired from service recently with a total of 1,489 days of unused sick leave. Omaha Postmaster Walter Kor isko called it a local answer to charges by government investi gators of "widespread abuses" of sick leave my postal workers. MAIL TRIBUNE Party The Pacific Telephone and Telegraph company re cently completed a job of modernizing its facilities in the area to the west of Jacksonville. In the mail the other day we got a nostalgic bit of writing from a modest woman who wishes her name not to be used, quoting an unnamed "Old Timer" rem iniscing about the old days of the party line. The Old Timer, our correspondent maintains, wants people to know how much the Applegate resi dents like the new service. - "TT'S A MIGHTY big satisfaction to step to the phone now and dial almost anywhere your 'neighbor over the back fence, Gold Hill, San Francisco and in short order you're talking like it was someone in the room," she quotes him as saying. But let him continue his story as she set it down : "Used to.be when a storm was blowing up, my wife Lizzie would get on the phone and do all her calling before the wind put the line out. Really, them was the days, when we had those old crank telephones on the wall. There were about 15 in a line, and every body got to kno'w everybody else's business. Some times of afternoons, a couple of women would be talk ing, and Lizzie and four or five other women would join, in and really chew the fat. The modern version of this is the kids doing their algebra on the phone. "VIE GOT mail two or three times a week then, in ' some places, and the woman living on the daily route, with her newspaper, would relay the news to the rest of us. Even got so Lizzie could tell who was ringing. "Some rang like a fire in town, others cranked slow and easy. "Did you ever hear of ten rings? That was like wrhat the radio calls now a 'speciel news bulletin.' You rang that if your house was on fire, or there was some general emergency everyone needed to know about. - "Then there was the telephone operator. She wasn't just a voice in the receiver. She was a warm and personal friend, and the telephone office in Jack sonville was her home. It used to set on the corner where the brick dial station is now The Operator gave you the time of day, repeated your conversation if your party couldn't hear, and let you know whether John had passed through town with his load. " A ND more than that. On Nov. 11, 1918, she rang ten rings on all our party lines and said, 'The Armistice has been signed, and I've been asked, to wake everybody.' Two of those uld-time operators were Mrs. Aletha Cantrall and Mrs. Barbara Jennings. "The biggest problem in those days was getting the line repaired; it was out more than it was in. Us ually it had to wait 'til a farmer got his hogs butchered or his hay in before he'd hunt up the trouble. Maybe in the mean tiriie, Martha would go out and hitch a line up off the ground with her apron strings, for tempor ary repairs. Of course, sometimes there would be a lineman hired, but not always. "THAT was in the days before the dial, and you - always could get through somehow. If . enough people heard a tinkle on their bells, they'd relay it 'til it got through. Of course, with that first dial sys tem, when your line went out, it was out! But it's a different story now; the. Bell company owns the lines, and as soon as it is reported out of order you see their trucks on the way." - The world is changing fast. Many people have fond memories about the "old days", of the party lines, and we think the "Old Timer's" recollections are interesting. But there are lots of people still around who remember when there weren't any tele phones at all. E.A. Surplus The American Friends Service Committee is a group which, through governmental cooperation, is taking advantage of the huge supplies of surplus food in this country. It is sending it overseas to nations where, as was remarked recently, "two gut of every three persons wakes up hungry." A contribution of only $10 will make available to the committee a full ton of surplus food, including powdered milk, cheese, butter or butter oil. ..,. . THIS IS stretching charitable dollars. The commit- tee says : Up to now, the distribution of food by AFSC has been carried on throught centers of existing Quaker Services overseas, with careful supervision and with due 'regard to local economic factors. By utilizing volunteer personnel already on the spot, our costs have been held to an abso lute minimum. Food is distributed in the spirit of Christian sharing, without regard to race, creed or political affiliation. It is shared with those whose hunger would otherwise be continuing. RAINS have been added to the dairy food surplus es available to the committee for this purpose, and are helping a bit to diminish the huge surpluses of food in this country. Donations, which are deductible for tax purposes, may be sent to the American Friends Service Commit tee, 1108 S.E. Grand Ave., Portland 14, Oregon. E.A. Portland Readied For Portland (U.R) A quarter mile of pipe was dragged across the Willamette river in Portland Sunday as Portland Gas and Coke Company made ready for the arrival of natural gas to the city. The 16-inch steel pipe is en cased in a two-inch thick con crete wrapper to keep it from floating. The pipe, weighing 240 tons was tugged into place span ning the river by a force of eight mighty bulldozers. The 1700-foot long pipe will be one of the major links in the company's Monday, January 30, 1956 Line Food Natural Gas system to feed natural gas to the eastern part of the city from its Linton plant. The pipe was threaded through a ten-foot deep trench across the Willamette. Mound City, S.D. U.R) A man who burglarized a service station here must be convinced that crime doesn't pay. He fell into the grease pit, getting plenty of grease on himself. And the loot wasn't much toward paying the cleaning bill he got only 80 cents. Glubb Pasha is Central Figure In Chaotic Jordan Situation CHARLES M. McCANN United Press Correspondent A slightly - built, stoop-shouldered Briton who has become known as Glubb Pasha is a cen tral figure in the chaotic sit uation in Jor dan. The recent riots that ex ploded all over Jordan from Amman, the capital to Jer usalem, were Charles Mccann directed pri marily against the United States and Great Britain. But they were directed also against Gen. John Bagot Glubb, commander in chief of Jordan's Arab Legion. Glubb's enemies are many and bitter. They call him "the em peror of Jordan." They say that he is the real power behind young King Hussein and that he Civil Rights Measures Aim of Two From N.W. By A. ROBERT SMITH Mail Tribune Correspondent Washington Two relative newcomers to Congress from the Pacific Northwest have emerged as the lawmak ers ' from the region most ac tively concern ed about en acting new legislation to effect civil rights prog ress. They are Reps. Thomas A. Robt. Smith M. Pelly soph- omore Republican from Seattle, and Edith Green, freshman Dem ocrat from Portland. Congressman Pelly has been designated by a bipartisan group of his colleagues to be regional leader in efforts that are being planned to bring civil rights to the floor of the House. Leading this group are Reps. Hugh Scott (R - Pa.) and Adam Clayton Powell (D-N.Y.). In a letter to Power accepting assignment as regional leader, Pelly declared: "As you no doubt know, I feel very strongly on this issue and will be happy to cooperate to the best of my ability in pro tecting the rights of the minority groups in our country that they may enjoy the liberty and free dom guaranteed our citizens un der the constitution." Anii-Poll Tax Bill After several meetings to lay down strategy on civil rights legislation, Pelly said he feels confident an anti-poll tax bill will come up for a vote this year. He is less confident of favorable action on legislation which he is co-sponsoring to outlaw cer tain forms of discrimination in interstate conveyances. The civil rights issue is ex pected to come up sooner when the House starts debate on the aid to education bill, for a rider is to be offered to ban any fed eral grants to states that do not abide by the Supreme Court's anti-segregation ruling. Pelly's inclinations is to sup port any such rider, which is the position being taken by House GOP leader Joe Martin. Some members consider this a dilemma, because they would hate to see any civil rights rider added by the House become the signal for a Dixiecrat filibuster against the education bill in the Senate. Congresswoman Green ' voted against the civil rights rider when it was first offered in the House Education Committee, be lieving that the bill would never have reached the floor r other wise. But she intends to support the Powell . amendment on the House floor. She feels she owes it to her constitutents to see their tax money is not spent to sup port a segregated school system. Was Criticized Since returning from a trip through the South, Mrs. Green has vowed to do her best to push for anti-poll tax and anti lynching laws. This has caused her to be criticized in some quarters for poking her nose into other people's business. Both Mrs. Green and Pelly have something to show to such critics, for they are co-sponsoring legislation that would out law a brand of discrimination that has long existed in their home states and the West at large. ' The Pelly - Green measure would knock out of the basic reclamation act a clause which prohibits employment of Asiatics on federal reclamation- projects. The bill was passed by the House last summer and is . now in the Senate. Dates Far Back While the issue is no longer a hot one on the Pacific coast, it is a mark of discrimination that dates back to the days of severe prejudice against Chinese labor on the West coast. It'-is one of those discriminatoryaws that has never been corrected. So the two lawmakers from the Pacific Northwest who are trying to get favorable action in the civil rights legislative field aren't limiting themselves, directs Jordan policy. Jordanian political groups, Egypt and Saudi Arabia all want to squeeze Britain out of Jordan. In pursuit of that end, they are out to get Glubb. "Colonialism" Symbol To his enemies, Glubb, for one thing, is a symbol of British "Co lonialism." But ironically, the complaint is not simply that Glubb, a Brit ton, is commander in chief of the legion, by far the best fight ing force in the Arab world. Glubb's enemies say that he has been in Jordan so long, and has so extended his political in fluence, that he is really the country's dictator. They say that he does not just represent Brit ish interference in middle east ern affairs. For all purposes, they say. he not only acts but thinks as a Jordan leader. Glubb's bitterest enemy in Jordan is Soleiman El Nabulsi, to, improving only some other section of the country, for they are trying to wipe out discrimi natory practices on their own home grounds. Communications Letters to the Editor must bear the name and address ot the writer although under certain circum stances the use ol a pen name or initial for publication is permis sible The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit all letters with an eye to clarification and condensa tion Letters submitted for publica tion must not exceed 400 words. For Natural Foods To the Editor: I have had let ters about the Natural Food as sociates, and how to obtain the Journal. One can become a mem ber for S4 a year, which includes Natural Food Farming Journal, Atlanta, Texas, a monthly pub lication. The NFA has a new 99 club for anyone or member who wants action so the American people can have better food, bet ter health. For more informa tion phone 2-8451 or 2-9365. The Oregon president is Mr. J. Verne Shangle. '"' Julia Grissom, Route 2, Box 657, Central Point, Ore. He Won't Give To the Editor: In reading the Tribune last evening I came across the Articles' regarding the status of the osteopathic physi cians designed for them by the medical fraternity in the pro posed Memorial hospital. To put it very mildly I was astounded that the medical doc tors could sink to such a low, low, stand as to attempt to 'ex clude the doctors of a healing fraternity as the osteopathic practitioners. My family doctor is, and has been, for more than 15 years, an osteopath. He has never failed to help me and mine. Could a medical doctor do any more satisfactory service? My doctor is- also an optome trist. He has fitted both me and my wife with glasses over the same period of time. All with the greatest satisfaction to both of us. Could a medically recog nized oculist do any better? My son came from the Coast Guard blind in one eye. Navy doctors could do nothing for him. Our optometrist restored his sight to normal. This, after oculists could do nothing How about it, doctors, is that osteopath unworthy of associat ing with the honorable(?) doctors of medicine? I, most emphatic ally, think he is; in any hospital, or any other place. As a phy sician, as an optometrist, as a surgeon, he is, at least equal to, if not superior, to any of them. Where do the medicals acquire right to exclude such a man from their holy midst? He, too, found it necessary to attend college to prepare himself for his -selected profession. He, too, complied with the Oregon state law in order to practice that profession. Moreover, the new hospital is being, in part, at least, built by tax money. Does not that fact carry weight? Or are the so called medical men to be put further up on the pedestal, and must the man in need of healing kowtow to a person. he does not like, and take a practitioner he does not want in order to be admitted to this new hospital? Is this hospital to be Hitler ized? Only the great poo bows to be "recognized therein? P am not a rich man," neither am I broke, but, while I might have been persuaded to contribute to the hospital, now I cannot . be. Nor shall I be, until the osteo pathic profession have been rec ognized as equal to the MDs. A. L. Unger, 634 Pennsylvania Ave. Medford, Ore. (Editor's note: The statement from the osteopathic physicians and surgeons, referred to above, concluded: ". . . The important thing is for the community to have this hospital. Our friends and patients may rest assured that in giving to this hospital they are giving to a worthy cause and one in the interests of humanity.") leader of the oposition in parli ment. "Glubb must go," Nabulsi said recently. "He is emperor of Jordan. He is no longer British, he knows the country people better than we do ourselves." Knows The People One reason for that is that Glubb .and his fellow legion leaders go out and get to know the people, seeking Jordan's best youths for military service. The great landowners, of whom Nab ulsi is one, stay in Amman.. Glubb, now 58, went to the Middle East in 1920 as a lieu tenant of engineers in the Brit ish army. He has remained there ever since, i He had been wounded three times in France , in World War I and had won the military cross for gallantry in action. Glubb resigned his army com mission in 1926 to become an administrative official in the government of Iraq. In 1930, he went to Jordan. He organized the legion, starting with 100 men. Now he commands 20,000. He even operates two schools, which educate picked boys-to be come officer material. Nabulsi admits that he help ed to organize the recent riots. He says there will be more, un less, the government changes its decision to cancel the elections which had been set for April and unless King Hussein fires Glubb. In the Day's News By FRANK JENKINS The weather in the Bay area this week has left quite a little' to be desired. Among its other antics, it has broken the ancient 21-days-in-a-row record, estab lished during the last wet cycle, which has hitherto been the mark for "comparison. But as a t o p i c for conversation the weather has had to take a back seat for the Abbott case in the long,, dark days when the jury has been deliberating. The papers have been devot ing about half their front sec tions to it every day, and it has provided small talk for every gathering of every kind. rpHE jury finally came in last - night, and today the town is buzzing with comment. In gen eral, the verdict is accepted as about the only one possible un der the circumstances. All I can say is that I'm glad I wasn't a member of the jury. Condemning a human being to death is serious business. Some how it seems more serious when there is no direct evidence. - Circumstantial evidence, of course, 'can be damning. And it is a notorious fact that human beings can be VERY inexact in their observation. All newspa per reporters are occupationally aware of the fact that when a dozen people see something happen there are likely to be at least a dozen versions of what happened. QTILL, if one is sitting on a jury and faces the terrible responsibility of. sending a hu man being to the gallows or the electric chair or the gas cham ber it is comforting indeed to have someone step up into the witness box and testify that he saw the deed and recognizes the defendant as the one who did it. That helps at night when the poor devil of a juryman needs to get some sleep. rjNE of the ruggedest jobs in " this Abbott case was held by a slight, quiet, scholarly-looking gentleman named Thomas. He was the alternate, the 13th jur or. I hope he isn't superstitious, because in the course of the long trial there was a 13th Fri day. In addition, he is the father of a 13-year-old son. I hope no black cats ran across his path when he was out taking his exercise and I trust that he walked under no ladders. It's bad enough to be a 13th juror, serv ing in a month with a 13th day that, falls on a Friday in a year when his son was aged 13. PUNISHMENT of a capital crime is serious business. I suppose death is the proper pen alty for brutal crimes, such as the murder of this little girl There is certainly no place in a decent world for people who are so put together as to be capable of doing such things. But con demning a human being to die is a hard job' to have to tackle as a civic duty. ' JETTING back to the 13th, or. " alternate juror, it is a system devised to save money for the taxpayers. This trial was at least one of the longest in California history. It ran for 54 calendar days, or 47 trial days. What with hotel bills for the jurors they were kept incommunicado at one of the Bay's best hotels its costs ran into a lot of sales tax pennies. The alternate sat with the jury throughout the trial. He listened to all the testimony, just as the other jurors did. But when all the evidence was in and the case was closed and the regular jurors retired to deliber ate, the alternate was ISOLAT ED. That is to say, he was shut I McttQf Of FQCt By Joe and Stewart Alsop ANOTHER GREAT DEBATE Washington For the first time in the history of the Eisen hower administration Jthe Demo crats ri-n to make a major issue of the Admin istra tion's defense policy. The plan now is to initiate a big Senate debate on the whole defense issue within a week or ten days. Sen. Henry Stewart Alsop Jackson of Washington will probably lead off with a speech acpuKjnf thf Administration of letting the .So viet Union gain a decisive lead in the vital field of ballistic mis siles. Sen. Stuart Symington is preparing his a n g r iest de fense speech Joseph' Alsop so far, describing the Admini stration defense program as a fraud on the American people. Others expected to enter the de bate include Senators John Ken nedy of Massachusetts, Mike Mansfield of Montana and Clin ton Anderson of New Mexico. Thereafter, no- less than four different committees will in quire into various phases of the Administration defense pro gram. According to present plans, the Armed Services Com mittee ' will call Gen. Matthew Ridgway to testify on. his charges that defense appropria tions were established on a po litical basis; Eidsway may also ko MllaJ A vancu uciuic liic Ajjpi epila tions Committee. -. "DUT GEN. Ridgway will not be the only authority on the national defense to be called to testify. The preparedness sub committee of the Armed Serv ices Committee is headed by Majority Leader Lyndon John son, and Johnson has been shap ing plans for a serious inquiry into the status of American air power: Johnson has been canvassing the field for a staff director- for the subcommittee. Men of the caliber of former Under Secre tary o the Air Force Ross Gil patrick and former chief of the Policy Planning Staff Paul Nitze have been considered for the post. A parade of expert witnesses on air power, both from within the Administration and outside it, will be called to testify on, the effects of the cuthanks in the Air Force program. " JOHNSON'S decision to make " a major investigation of the status of American air power is of recent origin. He ' has long felt, and reportedly still feels, that it would be a' mistake to make defense a party, issue, especially with President Eisen hower in the White House. Last year he left the issue more or less alone. But last fall he was visited at his Texas ranch by the tele vision entertainer, Arthur God frey. Godfrey is a -sincere and up in a room all by his lone some, with a special bailiff as his guide, protector and (let's say) KEEPER. The idea was that if any regu lar juror fell sick or was other wise incapacitated, the alternate would pinch-hit for him.. Other wise if some juror had become ill, or his mind had broken un der the strain, or something else untoward . had happened the whole show would have had to be put on again at great cost to the taxpayers of Alameda county. TT SOUNDS like a good system and I'm all for devices that save the taxpayer money al though, considering the way the citizenship of the whole Bay went for" the story, I think the taxpayers got their money's worth out of it. FUNERAL SERVICES Jn Every Price Range Since 1908 PERL Funeral Home Phone 2-6675-O eloquent - believer in the life- and-death importance of air power. And he converted Johnson to his view that a great national effort was required to retain American air supremacy. Johnson's conversion has en couraged others to have a criti cal look at the Eisenhower de fense program. Senator Jackson, who heads a subcommittee on military application of nuclear weapons is also planning an in quiry. He will emphasize parti cularly the comparative pro gress of this country and the So viet Union in the missile field, and he plans to call Secretary of the Air Force Donald Quarles. Air Force Chief of Staff Nathan Twining, and many others to testify on this subject CULL ANOTHER committee, the special subcommittee on disarmament headed by Sen. Hu bert Humphrey of Minnesota. also plans an inquiry involving tne defense issue. HumDhrev plans to call witnesses on the comparative level of American and Soviet armaments, and with the sharp-tongued and aggresive riumphrey in the chair, fre quent explosions are likely to occur. v What is in Drosnect. in short is an offensive all along the line Dy the Democrats on the issue of national defense lasting tnrougnout the current session and up to election day. The mo tives for this offensive are. of course, mixed. In Dart thev are nnliHnal Tn the past, the Administration has been doubly shielded from any prolonged and concerted criti cism oi its defense program. One shield has been the President's military reputation. The other has' been the old cry that ser ious discussion of issues affect ing national survival endanger security. OUT THIS is an election year, "and the Administration naturally will claim' credit with the voters for a balanced budget and reduced taxes. The Demo crats are eager to impress the voters with the fact that both have been achieved wholly at the expense of heavy cutbacks in the defense and security area. But in all fairness it must be said that the motives are not wholly political. Men like John son and Jackson and Symington are genuinely concerned by the mounting evidence that the bal- ace of power is shifting heavily m favor of the Soviets. Copyrighted 1956 New York Herald Tribuna Inc. EevDt is about the size of California, ' New" Mexico and Arizona combined as to area, but its total populations is large ly confined within the narrow limits of the Nile river valley. If God Is God GEO. N. TAYLOR If God is God why does He not put an end to war? And why does He . let the white man's diseases spread until heathen tribes far inland are rotting un der them? The answer is this is not the day of the , new world order. This is the day of sal vation. God is now calling out a people on whom he is to . spend his Father love In the ages to come when the last soul is brought in to fill out the roll call of the saved. Christ is to return and sweep out this pres ent world-order. He will then set up the new day wherein dwells righteousness. Turn, let your heart believe that Christ died for your every last sin from the cradle to the grave. At tha God gives you eternal life. Nor by works of righteousness which we have done but by his mercy he saves us. This message sponsored by a Portland family. adv. PERL'S every family may make funeral ar rangements which are In keeping with its means. A selection of services In every price range Is of fered to satisfy individual preferences and to meet all financial circumstances. Convenient Terms? Certainly I (nsjf&'-ii