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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Aug. 10, 1960)
o o 10 A American Living "Easy" Say Housewives in Rome By ROSE McKEE Rome - "Most Americans have no- idea how easy their living is.1 This is the view of two American women who, with their husbands and young children, have had the unusual experience o living in ro mantic 16th century palaces in the heart of old Rome. ; One of them is Mrs. Robert Cook, wife of a noted young American sculptor. The Cooks have lived in a palace near the Trevi Fountain for some 10 years. Their apartment is bn the fifth floor - and old palaces do not have elevators. . Mrs. Cook, the former Joan Marble who was a Washing ton newswoman before her marriage and is now the Rome 'correspondent for Diplomat magazine, told an intervieer from the National Association of Home Builders in Wash- Dancers To Appear Thursday Amanda Taylor, Jane Stev ens and Dennis Zorn, three dancers from the 1960 Ore gon Shakespearean festival company in Ashland, will pre sent a demonstration on mod ern dance Thursday, August 11, at 7:30 p.m. at Rogue gallery, 220 West Main street, It is open to the public. ; Mrs. Taylor, choreographer for the festival, completed her work for a bachelor's degree at the University of Texas in 1957, with a major in dance and a minor in drama. She has studied dance with Shir- lee Dodge, and was Miss Dodge's assistant for two years. The choreographer has also studied with Hanya Holm, and as a recipient of a grant from the West German gov ernment, traveled to Europe to study dance with Mary Wigman In Berlin. Mrs. Tay lor has taught at Lon Morris Junior college, Jacksonville, Tex., and is a member of the drama staff at the University of Texas. Miss Stevens, who lives in Grants Pass, is a junior lan guage major at the Univer sity of Oregon and made her initial dance appearance with the festival. Miss Stevens ap peared in the University pro duction of "The Mntchmnkor," "The King and 1" and "The Tempest." Dennis Zorn, who is from Houston, Tex., appears with the festival as a dancer for his first season. As a student at Lon Morris college, he por trayed Sebastian in "Twelfth Night," Starveling in "A Mid summer Night's Dream" and Harry Beaton in "Brigadoon." For the Theater Incorporated in Houston, ho was the lead dancer in "Guys and Dolls." His role as John In "Dark of the Moon" won him the title of "best actor" in a statewide contest. The program Thursday night is designed to augment an exhibit of modern dance photography brought up from San Francisco nnd now on dis play at the gallery. Women of Moose To Meet Tonight . Women of the Moose will meet tonight at 8 o'clock at the Moose hall, 11 South Newtown street. Several members of the lodge attended the slate con vention held in Portland Julv 29, 30 and 31. Those attend ing were Mr. and Mrs. Don Carlton, Mr. and Mrs. Wil fred Huffman, Mr. and Mrs. John Keener, Mr. and Mrs Cecil Emery, Mr. and Mrs Leo Webster, and Mrs. Des mond Sweet. It tPt)A if ll PATCHWORK PRETTY Now it's fashionable to wear patches! This novel patchwork . skirt was made from plnln and printed cotton feed and flour sacks. The patches are ac cented by rows of Wright's . rick rack. Directions for mak ing the skirt may be obtained from the National Cotton Council, Box 8805 Department U, Memphis 1 Tennessee. ington, that she was quite used to having visitors arrive speechless and out of breath. One of the few guests who didn't mind the climb was Dr. Paul Dudley White, the Boston heart specialist who has been one of President Eisenhower's doctors. Dr White is a friend of Mrs. Cook's father, Dr. Henry Mar ble, a prominent Boston sur geon. Stairs A Problem Getting the children up and down the stairs also has been a problem. Jennifer, 8, nat urally can manage by herself now but Henry, 114, needs help. The other American wom an living in a palace is Mrs. Claire Sterling, Rome corre spondent for The Reporter magazine. She and her novel 1st husband, Thomas, came to Rome "in a couple of suit cases nine years ago on their honeymoon. They had been living in New York, where she had a one-room kitchenette and he, one room with no kitchenette. Now they have a stunning 18 room apartment in the Lan- chelotti palace. It is noted for its fine Renaissance courtyard with beautiful statuary. Mrs. Sterling has furnished the apartment with antiques, many of which she found on the flea market. Others she bought by calling out the win dow to the owners of junk carts. The junk carts are there because antique shops . have sprung up around the palace. Red Velvet Doors Doors between some of the rooms in the Sterlings' apart ment are most unusual. They are covered entirely by faded yet lustrous red velvet of great age. A stand-out decoration in the living room is four-foot-high, gold-leaf cradle In which g c n e r ations of Lanchelotti princes and princesses were rocked. Shell-shaped, it is es timated to be worth thousands of dollars. Now it holds ivy and other house plants, which have their own hidden con tainers to prevent damage. Mrs. Sterling enjoys her sensational aparatmont but, she said, "I chase after the house all the time and the house is running away from me." She "misses things that work - I'd like to be able to put out my hand and press a button. Her husband's newest book. "Stanley's Way, a Sentimental Journey Through Africa," is about to be puDiisnea ana already is causing a stir in literary circles. The Cooks wore dismantling their charming palace - home for they are about to move to an apartment on the Piazza Borghcse, a block from the Tiber. They will have second floor quarters but the main attraction for Mrs. Cook is that "we will have four bed rooms and Henry will play every day in the gardens of the Caslel St. Angelo." They will also have a living room, separate dining room, bathroom, two inner balconies overlooking a court, nnd a ter race where Mrs. Cook plans to raise flowers and herbs. There will also be a maid's room and bath. "But there is not a single closet in the apartment nor a drop of storage space," Mrs. Cook said. She will use old fashioned wardrobes for clothes. Moving isn't a matter of a day or two but of weeks, she explained. There "is no refrigerator (in the new quar ters), no stove, no hot water heater, no lighting fixtures, just two wires sticking out of a wall, and not even a light meter," she said. Getting permission from the gas, electric, and phone com panies to make installations has been a complicated and long procedure. Mrs. Cook stood in four long lines over the course of two mornings to get a phono connected. By comparison, buying the equip ment "was nothing." In her new apartment, as in the palace, Mrs, Cook will have sculpture by her husband for distinctive decor ation. Among their treasured pieces arc those for which their daughter was the model. His work is exhibited in New York every two years and they return for the event. They expect to continue to make their home In Rome be cause he considers it has the best foundation for casting. Calendar Calendar notices and newt for the society section of The Mali Tribune must ho submitted tn writing and deadline lir the Sun day edition Is 1 p. in Friday Dead line for the weekly calendar Is 0 a.m of the day of publication and for week day news is A pjri tho day before publlcaUon Thursday: 12:30 p.m. - Medford So journers, Mrs. O. A. Eden, 211 Gcnessec st. 8 p.m. - Jackson County Medical Assistants, Rogue Val ley Country club. Fridayi 1 p.m. - Phoenix Garden club, Phoenix Community hall. f , Camp Club Announces Winners Camp White - Camp White Veterans Bridge club con ducted master point play last Friday, with two sections of bridge fans on hand for the competition. Mr. and Mrs. George Rode scored 99 V2 points to lead north-south players in Section A, and the Herschcl Obyes, Grants Pass, took first place for east-west players, in that section, scoring 101 V2 points. Jack Barr and Mrs. Belle Van Dyke topped north-south players in Section B, scoring 88 points, and the Berg Mar ens headed east-west players in B section with 80V& points. Other Section A, north south winners, were Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Coode, Wilder vilie, second, 99; the Leland Clarks, third, 98; Mrs. Helen Conroy and Mrs. Maud Codding, fourth, 83. Section A, east-west win ners, were Mrs. Georgia John son and Don Riverman, sec ond, 98; Mrs. Ben Todd and Mrs. John S. Winslow, third, 87; the E. K. Rickers, fourth, 84V4. Additional winners in Sec tion B, north-south, were Mrs. John Dougherty and Paul Hatton, second, 82 points; Mr. and Mrs. Howard J. Boyd, third, 79; Roy Pruitt and John Shortrldge, fourth, 77. Others Section B, east-west winners, were Paul McDuffee and Richard House, second, 73; Mrs. Lois Hoylman and Mrs. Peli Davenport, Grants Pass, third, 70; Mrs. H. Reddick and Mrs. M. Davis, tied with Mrs. Fred Burich and Mrs. J. J. Finegan for fourth and fifth, each pair scoring 61 points. Prizes furnished by the American Legion auxiliary were awarded to veterans holding highest scores for July play. Refreshments followed play, with Mrs. E. R. Ricker as hostess. University "Co Nothing The S By JAMES GILLESPY United Press International Tallahassee, Fla.-IUPll-Until 1047 Florida State University was an all-girl college. Bui it was converted Into a co-educational university and things haven't been the same since-at least not in a couple of classes. There seems to be some confusion about which sex enrolls where. One girl, a beautiful bru nette from Homestead, Fla., made history last semester when she slimed up in an Air Force ROTC course. ,1 - j PIKST CLASS Travel first class this Rummer In cotton Unit so .turn ten that puck easily ami rcqulro Uttlo or no Iron ing. Tho blouse of till smart checked outfit by Jiuitzen mny ho worn in or out of the slender skirt. PRETTY Look pretty while worklns; around tho house In a rose-sprigged cotton dress styled with Uced bodice, brief puffed sleeves, nnd a tiered skirt. This wrap 'n' Be deslim by Swirl Is eaay to slip Into nnd requires little or no Ironing. ... ! v viral 1 fr k- . --- Kiwi iV Hi mm Women's News Situation in Guatemala Exaggerated, By MARGARET SCHULER Guatemala City - Friends from the States write, inquir ing about the political situa tion in Guatemala and ask me how soon I will be home. I think it isn't that serious at least, at present. Life goes on as usual. Schools are- in session; children laugh and play in the streets; busses are full of people and business houses and markets are open. The curfew law, established a month ago, is off and on. When it's quiet for a night or two, it is called off and movies open; then when a new riot starts, and a bomb (last night six) is exploded, it is on again and streets are deserted by nine o'clock. Newspapers exaggerate eve ry situation. Time magazine, in reporting the bombing of the cinema, quoted 30 persons killed. As a matter of fact one man died-the one who had the bomb and it is thought it may not have been con nected with the current sit uation at all, The outbreak began osten sibly with a university "huelga"-strike-because the teachers had not been paid for three months. (I wrote about it when it happened.) It was fomented and backed by foreign agitators. Anything is an excuse-the government, the President, foreign inter ests here, One day this week a teacher in our school opened the morning paper and to her hor ror saw a picture of her 13- year-old grandson, along with classmates, rioting and throw ing stones at policemen. It is certain that children of that age do not instigate such in c i d e n t s. (Incidentally, the school was dissolved.) nverts"; ame Since Joan Drawdy, a junior in the food and nutrition school, was the first woman in the history of the school's ROTC to take a military course. And she racked up an "A," which placed her in the top 10 per cent in a class of 450 men. The co-educational system works the other way too. There's a man in the dress design department and he rated high in his class. Kirk Templeman, 20-year-old fashion design major from Miami Springs, Fla., says he's planning a career in theatrical design. Templeman faced the assign ment last semester of submit ting a dress he designed and made himself. His female classmates designed dresses for themselves. Templeman solved the prob lem neatly by designing a gray and white cotton frock for his professor, Mrs. Elea nore Adam. A lifetime love for flying helped push the 18-year-old Miss Drawdy into the ROTC. Her father, a' south Florida farmer, has flown and her two brothers are pilots. The course she picked was Air Science 101. It included such subjects as potentials of power, professional opportu nities in the Air Force, and the military instruments of national security. And she isn't through. She said she has enrolled for an other military course and hopes to take a few more be fore she graduates in 1961. Like Templeman, she 'faced a normally-masculine problem in her class. Male members of the ROTC must drill once a week. She would have been out of place in the rifle carrying ranks under the eye of a drill sergeant. But her membership in the Angel Flight, a sister organ ization to the Air ROTC's hon orary society, solved the drill problem. She graded high in the leadership examination, showing a knowledge of drill movements, parades, cere monies and customs and cour tesies of the service. Indian Artifacts Topic for Session A program on Indian Arti facts has been planned for the next meeting of Roxy Ann Gem and Mineral club. It will be held Friday, August 12, at 8 p.m. at Girls Com munity club. Interested visitors are wel come. Past Presidents Announce Meeting Mrs. G. T. Dynge will be hostess for a meeting of past presidents of the Ladies' aux iliary, Crater Lake aerie, Fraternal Order of Eagles, Friday, August 12. The ses sion will be held at her home, Route 2, Box 197G, Central Point, at 1:30 p.m. A business meeting will fol low dessert. MEDFORD MAIL TRIBUNE, MEDFORD, ORE. Says Writer The bombs in the beautiful post office did but little dam age, and they caught the ter rorists. Real Guatemaitecas apolo gize for the situation, vehem ently declaring it is not old timers causing the trouble; that it is a foreign element. But if you read the history of this beautiful little country, you will see there have been many turbulent times. One year there were six presi dents. One, I understand, was in office but two hours. And, although a president is elect ed for six years, there seems to have been almost an aver age of a president every two years. I am not a prognosticating commentator and cannot pre dict what this will lead to. The situation seems about the same as it was a month ago. Viewers Poll Announced Grants Pass-Nancy Brown of Medford won first place in the junior division in the popularity poll by the view ers of the Southern Oregon Art exhibit held last week under the sponsorship of the Grants Pass branch, American Association of U ni v e r sity Women. Her picture, an opaque wa tercolor entitled "Modernis tic", was also awarded a blue ribbon by the judges. In the junior section Carl Washburn of Medford re ceived second place in the popularity vote for his pic ture "Man with Sword . In the adult division, Mrs L. C. McMahon, 192 Janney Lane, Medford, tied for sec ond place with Bonnie Rust of Grants Pass. Mrs. McMa hon's entry was "Demetrius and the Robe". Bonnie Rust's was "The Old Mill". First prize in the adult sec tion in the popularity vote went to Bonnie Rust of Grants Pass for her picture "Autumn Flame." Winners in the show as chosen by three judges were previously announced. A work by Eugene Bennett, Medford artist, was judged sweepstakes winner. Pilot, Family At Ranch Home; Couple Honored Hornbrook - Mr. and Mrs. Robert Larson and son Eric, Los Gates, Calif., are spending a two weeks vacation in their trailer house at their ranch up Ditch creek. Mr. Larson, who is an airplane pilot, bought the former Jesperson ranch last fall, and he and his family plan to make it their home when he retires in about a year. Sunday visitors of Mrs. Mary Kurt were Mr. and Mrs. Claude Wanichek and son Jack of Bend, Ore. Mr. Wanichek is a cousin of Mrs. Kurt, and Mrs. Wanichek a teacher, is attending summer classes at Southern Oregon college in Ashland. Mr. and Mrs. Rob Cummins attended a farewell picnic at the Yreka City park on Sun day honoring Pastor and Mrs. R. J. Borrowdale of the Yreka Seventh Day Adventist church. The Borrowdales are retiring after serving their church for many years, of which 35" years were spent as missionaries in India. He has been at the Yreka church for over five years. Mr. and Mrs. Al Gregory and children, Kathy, Mike and Terry, spent part of last week at the home of Charles Grieve while they visited friends in the community. Mr. Gregory was principal of the local grammar school four years ago. They left on Thursday to return to their home at Schenectody, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Farm er and sons, Steve, Dale, Gene and Mickey, attended the Little Rogue All-Star games at Central Valley last week end. They visited Mr. and Mrs. William Farmer and two sons at Redding, then drove to the const for a week's vacation. -Bob Farmer, assisted by "Ike" Dooley, was manager of the Hornbrook Little League baseball team this year. Wednesday visitors at the j home of Mr. and Mrs. Ed Smith were Mr Smith's sister, Mrs. Frances Steele , Grass Valley,' Calif., and her friend Mrs. Frances Hardman of Fresno. They were en route north for a vacation in Can ada. The National Junior Cham ber of Commerce is celebrat ing its 40th birthday this year. x Social Events mm We can think of a hundred reasons why we would rather live in Medford, Ore., than in any city in the USSR (we wouldn't mind visiting Russia, however, providing we could be assured that we wouldn't have to stay there.) But the hundred and first reason added to the list was theresult of a story from Moscow written by Seymoure Topping. In the Soviet Union, wrote Mr. Topping, the official press is the guardian of the people's morals and manners. "The other day the editors of a Communist youth newspaper asked a 17-year-old girl to drop into the office to explain her behaviour at a party, he The case of the 17-year-old girl came to the attention of Komsomolskaya Pravda when the newspaper obtained a letter which she had written to a friend. The letter, reported Mr. Topping, contained "piquant details" of a wedding party at which much wine was imbibed and at which the girl was surrounded by cavaliers. The youth newspaper used of teenagers in trouble to demand that frank talks on sex relations be included in school curriculums for teen-agers. The paper blamed parents promiscuity in Russia, and attributed it to a lack of education Now, this editor of the women's section of a newspaper is heartily glad we don't have to add guardian of the morals to our list of duties. True, we believe that. newspapers should certainly be a force for good in their communities, and that generally speaking, the munity are the concern of the enough to do. We try to keep of hundreds of clubs, lodges and service organizations, with social activities such as wedding, dances, parties and scores of big benefits and drives. We don't mind being asked such questions as "what shall I wear to a dinner at the Country club Saturday night, who should be in the receiving line at a golden wedding anniversary recep'tion, is it proper for a member of the bride s where can I find a recipe for making old-fashioned rose jars and how do you address an invitation to an English couple who hold a title?" If we don't know the answers, we help the questioner find the answer. But heaven forbid that we should have to ask a teen age girl to drop in and "explain her behaviour." Margaret Schuler, who writes today about the recent bombings and other political disorders in Guatemala City, where she is teaching school, Potpourri that she was disappointed not to have had replies to published letters written by her students. Mrs. S. is deeply disturbed by the attitude toward the United States of many residents of the city in which she is temporarily living, and of the misconceptions and mis-understandings. She is hopeful yet of promoting correspondence between school age young people in the Medford and Guatemala City. The theme of some of the letters written by the young people in Mrs. Schuler's English classes has been that people of the United States know too little about other countries, and "educated" Americans are not as well educated as their counterparts in Central American and many other countries. We'll not argue that point, but this seems an appropriate time to re-print a story about what happened to Marcus Griffin, publisher of a newspaper in New Mexico. Residents of the United States, it seems, not only know too little about other countries, they know too little about their own. Here is the story; "In a recent Hitching Post column in the Eddy County News, Griffin tells of a shopping experience in New York. He purchased some gifts for his grandchildren and wrote out a check in payment after showing identifications. He wanted the purchases mailed home to New Mexico. "The saleslady asked for an expert manifset, inquired if Griffin's country had a free trade pact with the United Stales and then said it was foreign countries or insular merchandise. "Griffin finally asked to see the manager, who obligingly informed the saleslady that Griffin's part of the country had interlocking trade agreements with the United States. "The presents duly arrived in Carlsbad right after the grandchildren had ended their visit. A few days later came a letter from the store manager explaining the delay. " 'Regretfully, I must say we couldn't make an exception in your case on out-of-country checks. So we did not mail the presents until the checks cleared," he wrote. The man ager also expressed regret that he did not speak Spanish as well as Griffin spoke English." When Pal Peg handed us this clipping, she said its con tents had been no surprise to her. When Peg and her sister, living then in New Mexico, arrived at a well-known girls' school in a neighboring state to register, they were asked to produce their passports. In view of this dispatch from Russia, another one from Vienna takes on new interest. An Associated Press News release from Vienna when Premier Khrushchev and his family visited that city said that Khrushchev's daughter "made Soviet fashion history tonight." The news story said the young woman attended a diplomatic reception wearing a low-cut cocktail dress. Now, Russian women haven't been wearing low-cut dresses for a long time. Yelena N. Khru shchev, a 23-year-old chemist, had been one of the "plainer" women in the Soviet delegation, it seems. Her heels had been low, her dresses long and her necklines had been prim. Then came the reception. Miss K. wore a flowered silk gown drawn in at the waist and made with a narrow skirt. She had a new hair style with bangs on her forehead, and she wore jewels diamond earrings and a three-strand pearl necklace. If this item leaves the reader a little depressed, as it certainly should, Potpurri will cheer you up with another, this one from the New York Times. "A touch of confusion resulted recently when reference was made to Bernstein's Kosher Chinese restaurant at 135 Essex street," said the little article. "The management has pointed out that kosher Chinese food is served there on Wednesdays from 5 to 10 p.m. and Saturdays from sundown to 3 a.m." Potpourri had read the original article. We were not only confused, we were positively entranced at the idea of a kosher Chinese restaurant. And we can't resist this one, either. It was on the front page of the Christian Science Monitor and was datelined Kamloops, B.C. "A weary pilot flying forest fire patrol spotted a wisp of smoke and the flicker of flame in the bush below. "Whoosh! He loosed 100 gallons of water. It drenched four British Columbia Forest Service employees who were cooking breakfast on a campfire. They were somewhat put out." O.S. Ironing Is the Hardest Task Most Housewives Have To Do It Can Be the EASIEST! TRY an IRONRITE-$2.50 per Veek WITH INSTRUCTION CROSIER APPLIANCE 6th & Front Phone SP 2-6011 wrote. this case and other instances and schools for the growth of morals of those in the com paper. But we already have in touch with the activities family to give her a shower. said in a personal note to the policy to clear checks to possessions before sending out Artificial Flowers Now Smell Like Real Thins:" By LEROY POPE United Press International New York-Artificial flowers-smelling like posies from the garden-and plastic mouse traps with the aroma of fat bacon built in for bait are among the products of a new industry that may have quite a future. Fragrance Process company, of New York, is marketing the scent-impregnating in vention of Alfred Neuwald, a Hungarian-American chem ist. It's called poly-scent. Neuwald learned how to put scores of scent into poly ethelene pellets which can be diffused into any extruded or injection-molded plastic prod uct or in polyethelene film. A dozen companies already are using poly-scent in artifi cial flowers and to perfume polyethelene bags used to hold lingerie, hosiery and some other dry goods. Executive president Jack Barry, former TV producer, said the big market will be in scented polyethelene bags for fruits and vegetables. "Several big supermarket chains are waiting for the green light from the federal food and drug administration to put oranges in orange scented bags, strawberries in film that smells like berries and even package potatoes in their own earthy scent," Bar ry explained. "The idea, of course, is sim ply to make things more at tractive and to restore to the supermarket some of the de lightful smells that went out when plastic packaging first came to the fruit and produce counters." But the plastic makers are going much farther. They are impregnating the caps of tubes and squeeze bottles for all feWEISFIELD'SrfUf: sssSsvairssL' rws .J'w.i ; . r. wrvv frrr-wfcisw. &qNX MAONIFICIN1LT STYUD AND HA HO DtYAIUV 14. KARA' qT MOUNTING! SET WITH FIF BMOH1 DIAMONDS FRO tkAA OUR OWN DIAMOND CUTTINO AND POU5HINQ PLANT IN USC WflSflElDS FAMOUS IOW, Here's Why Other 12 SPARKLING DIAMONDS BOTH RINGS I Uw EASY TERMS 6 RADIANT DIAMONDS I B0TH 1 E.floo I RINGS tt&W I BUDGET TERMS S 17 DAZZLING g DIAMONDS H BOTH 1 S POO H RINGS BUDGET TERMS S 122 E. Main Street Store Hours: 9:30 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 10, 1960 sorts of products with pleas ant odors that match their con tents or in subtle ways make them more salable. Record makers even are scenting plastic records with perfumes attuned to the music inscribed on them. "At least 30 manufacturers of rat traps are interested in our idea of a bacon scent that means the trap won't have to be baited," Barry said. The scents last up to two years, which in most cases ex ceeds the life of the products. Fragrance Process also is marketing an aroma dis penser, which can spray a scent over a comparatively large area under controlled conditions. A chain of Boston stores used the dispenser in a strawberry promotion early this summer. "We're still feeling our way," Barry said. "The use of lasting odors impregnated right into products may have fascinating possibilities. We've naci suggestions uuu nuweiea. print dresses be treated with a plastic containing the odor of the flowers in the print. "Another chap suggested we try to develop smelly scents for artificial worms, clams and other fishing baits. "Seems the price of fresh bait has skyrocketed in recent years and, while present arti ficial baits look realistic, many fish won't touch them because they hunt food by smell instead of by sight." It is estimated that more than 3,000,000 children in the U.S. have some defect in their hearing. A majority of these same children have some eye sight problem. Glasses with hearing aids "invisibly" at tached are now available for children. 4 TV- AMSTIRDAMf HOLLAND EASY CREDIT TERMSi Weisfield's Sell Jeweler! LARGE SOLITAIRE g and Diamond Band BOTH 1850 I RINGS IVV Q LOW CREDIT TERMS H 7 SHIMMERING DIAMONDS BOTH 00 rings if Jr BUDGET TERMS m LARGE SOLITAIRE H MATCHING BAND S LOW EASY TERMS ' Phone SP 3-5348 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.