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About Medford mail tribune. (Medford, Or.) 1909-1989 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 30, 1960)
FRIDAY. Medford&Tribunk "Everyone in Southern Oregon Reads The Mail Tribune" Published Daily except Saturday by MEDFORD PRINTING CO 33 North Fir St.Ph SP 2-6U1 ROBERT W RUHL. Editor HERB GREY Advertising Manager GERALD T LATHAM Bus Mgr ERIC W ALLEN JR.. Mne Edltol EARL H ADAMS, City Editor HARRY CHIPMAN. Teleg Editor RICHARD JEWETT Sports Editol OLIVE STARCHER. Women's Editor DALE ERICKSON, Circulation Mgr An Independent Newspaper Entered as aecond class matter at Medford. Oregon, under Act of March 3. 1897 SUBSCRIPTION RATES lly Mai) In Advance. Copy 10c Dally and Sunday 1 year IS00 Dally and Sunday 6 tnos 8 00 Dallv and Sunday 3 mos 4.25 Sunday Only One year S4.20 By Carrier In Advance Medford Ashland. Central Point &"' Point. Jacksonville Gold Hill Phoenix Shady Cove. Rogue Rlv mr Tn1nt mid fin IfMtor rOUtCS Dally and Sunday 1 vear S18 00 Da'lv and Sunday 1 mo l SO Carrier and Dealers copy iOc All Terms Cash in Advance 6"clal Paper"of"city 'of Medford Official Papsr of Jackson County United Press International Full Leased Wire U.P.1 Telephoto jewspictures "MEMBER OF AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATIONS Advertising Representative: WEST HOLIDAY CO.. INC Of fices in New York Chicago De. trolt. San Francisco. Los Angeles Seattle. Portland St Louis At 1 anta. Vancouver 9 C NEWSPAPER BlISHERS SOCIATION NATIONAL, EDITORIAI ASgjCTl(bjN Flight o' Time Medlord and Jackson County History from the files of The Mall Tribune 10. 20. 30 40 and 50 years aoo. 10 YEARS AGO . Dec. 30. 1950 (Saturday) The Medford Army and Air Force recruiting office has an nounced that quotas for enlist ment in the Air Force are now "wide open." " A total of 47 persons met violent deaths in Jackson county during 1950, including 17 deaths attributed to auto mobile accidents. 20 YEARS AGO Doc. 30, 1940 (Monday) The Oregon stale game com mission failed in circuit court yesterday in an attempt to stop construction of a Bcavcr Pnrlland Cement company dam in the Rogue river near Gold Hill. From Arthur Perry's "Ye Smudge Pot" column: "Bunco artists skinned an upslaie res Irlnnl mil nf SR. 000 in a fake but elaborate transaction. This Is a sign OI returning proa pcrity, however ominous." 30 YEARS AGO Dec. 30, 1930 (Tuesday) More than $1 million will be spent in the cily during the next year for construction of a new courthouse and high school. A secret probe of a recent killing of a mnn during a still raid in the Reese creek area was completed yesterday, but the results have not yet been made public. 40 YEARS AGO Dec. 30, 1920 (Thursday) The state legislature has set a minimum salary of $1,200 a year for Oregon teachers. Medford bank deposits showed a considerable gain during the past year. 50 YEARS AGO Dec. 30. 1910 (Friday) The Pacific and Eastern railroad will begin runs to morrow on Its new track be tween Eagle Point and Med ford. . Consressman II 0 0 k I ns of Pennsylvania has sold his (runt nt Dnnnn mllm, timlinr to an Eastern syndicate for S,!',a million. Mhal's Your I.Q.? Nine ot fen correct superior: oven or eight Is excellent: live ei us is good. 1. The Philippine Islands are In which archipelago? 2. Who baptized Jesus? 3. Is a "Chump" a chunk of wood, the thick end of something, or a stupid per son? 4. Complete the proverb, "A stitch in time . . . ." 5. Haganah is the name of Jewish, or Arab, fighting forces? 6. Name the man that for the fourth time has been named jockey of the year. 7. The New Orleans famed festival, Mardl Gras, starts to morrow evening; true or false? 8. On what continent was the Libyan campaign of World War II iought? 9. Cicada is a dance, food, or insect? 10. Correct the following sentence: "The company has agreed to grant their em ployees a wage increase." Answers: 1. Malay. 2. John. 3. All three. 4. ". . . saves nine." 5. Jewish. 6. William Hartack. 7. False. 8. Africa. 9. Insect. 10. ". . . to grant it employees . . ." 4 DECEMBER 3D. 1960 Compassion and Waste Compassion is a noble emotion. " Sometimes, however, compassion can cloud good clear judgment. The Edmond, Oklahoma, Sun recently had an editorial (reprinted in the Roseburg News Review) which bewailed this situation. Too long, it declared, the concern and sym pathy of society has been devoted exclusively to "the selfish, the lazy, the crafty and the con fused," and not enough attention has been given to "the industrious, the able, the honest and the morally strong." 'JprlE Sun has a point. It added: "What would happen if we stopped psychoanalyzing the chicken-chested punk who knows only to sneer, and paid some genuine attention to the squares who have never stabbed a teacher or mugged an elderly woman? "Think of the millions of dollars we've spent trying to find out what makes the delinquent. Think of the time our sociologists have spent trying to analyze the alcoholic, belay the broken home, and comprehend the criminal ... "We've taken the good guy for granted so long in this country that we apparently know nothing what ever about him. Is he religious? Somctimes-but quite often not. Was he properly whaled by his parents when he was a kid? Again sometimes-but quite often not. Was he a sheer joy to his teachers? Not always often he was the lad who turned their hair prema turely gray. But do we know about the bad guy? You bet we do. We know he is misunderstood, misguided, misdirected and miscrable-a victim of his environ ment. We know we must pity him and pamper him and pay for his rehabilitation. "We must at all costs ... be nice to him. I say nuts to him and to our national fetish of the overwrought and discontentcd-the neurotic personality . . , the up set psyche , . . and the complex complex . . " flITH much of this we agree. But a little thought will reveal why so ciety has focused so much attention on the sub standard human, rather than the average or superior one. It is for two basic reasons: 1. The average or superior person, by and large, gets along without too much help. 2. We cannot indefinitely afford the costly waste or numan talent and potential represented by the sub-standard, the criminally inclined, or the radically maladjusted. We do need to find talents. But, too, and compassion entirely aside, we must continue the "salvage job" of helping the others to become productive members of society, rather than a drag and expense on every one else. Wfj can t attord not to. KA. Opposition Mounting Reaction to Gov. Mark Hatfield's sweeping governmental reorganization plan is beginning to be heard. ; Frequently, it goes something like this: "Oh, I'm in general agreement with the over all objectives, BUT . . ." And then the speaker goes on to disapprove one or more of the specific suggested changes. This is the type of reaction which can be expected, in a score or more different fields. And the cumulative' effect will amount to mas sive and widespread opposition to the radical changes proposed. EXAMPLES can be cited : " Just the other day, the travel advisory com mittee, made up of a number of Oregon news papermen who are consulted on plans of the travel information division of the highway de- lartment, issued a statement objecting to the inclusion of this department in a proposed new department of commerce. And the parks advisory committee of the department is objecting to the proposal that it be included in a department of natural resources, due in large part to its intimate relationship, his toric, financial and otherwise, with the highway department. ' Governor Hatfield's own appointee as secre tary of state, Howell Appling Jr., has indicated he does not agree fully with the Governor on the latter's proposal's for institutions, and the future of the office of secretary of state. "Opposition has developed to the proposed merg--Mng of the fish and game commissions again into a department of natural resources. And so it goes. Undoubtedly other objections will be heard, as the scope of the reorganization proposals sinks in. And, also, undoubtedly there are many state employees at top administrative levels who have strong objections but hesitate to voice them be cause of the Governor's stand. But their opposi tion will be potent when it conies to making changes. f E REPEAT that there should be no theoreti- cal objection to consideration of proposed changes on an individual basis. Many of the proposals would, indeed, make for increased efficiency and administrative com mon sense. But two considerations deserve mention. One is that it must be recognized that major reorganization of the state involves a complete rejection and repudiation of Oregon's long history of citizen participation in government through its highly successful, clean and admirably adminis tered boards and commissions. Another is that piecemeal consideration of the proposed changes could well keep the legislature in session month after month after month as dif fering views are threshed out. Meanwhile, there's no need for undue hurry, even though Governor Hatfield, an ambitious man who likes the feel pf political power, would like to see the changes made while he is still governor b.A. and encourage our best Dennis the Menace OH,OU POOR PEOPLE! lCANfAVKW, but you HAVE TO STAY HERE IVITH HIM ' . . . .. Communications Leilers to the Editor must bear the name and address of the writer, although under certain circumstances the use of a pen name or initial for publication is permissible. The Mail Tribune reserves the right to edit ail letters with a view to clarification and condensation. Letters submitted for pub lication must not exceed 400 words. The letters printed in this column do not necessarily represent the views of the paper; in fact the contrary is The Best Advice . . . To the Editor: The best of advice, though sadly needed Is ill-received and little heed ed. There are exceptions but woefully few and far between Also hard to fathom is the urge to keep on giving same. Like my well intentioncd let ter some years ago to the Saturday Evening Post that concerned their full - page whiskey ad, obviously aimed at the west coast logging fra ternity. But their derisive laughter and four letter word remarks should have been heard by the ad-makers than by me, field editor of the old Timberman logging - sawmill irig journal. Why? The ad pictured a hi- climber topping an intended spar-tree. He was shown rud dy-faced and grinning as he relaxed arm-free in his life line. Without exception, these t u f f i e s are humped back against their life-line with hands as well as feet braced against the tree-trunk to take the whip-lash as the still big top kicks off on its some 100 feet plunge earthward. But the insult that so riled the loggers was the limbing. Instead of being axed off flush to the bark, stubs 8 to 12 inches long were left on. Just how, we inquired, would the hi-climber flip his life-line up or down in rigging the half ton bull-block in place, rig up back-line, high-lead, top and buckle guy-lines without be ing constantly siwashed on the limb-stubs? To which we got an ivory-towered reply that all such is the responsi bility of the advertising agen cy, period. Even our sugges tion that the hi-climbcr must have took too long a pull at the gaily colored whiskey bot tle, was pointedly ignored. All this was nigh forgotten (ill we viewed the astonishing number of people employed in getting out a daily paper also the lovely picturing of Method To Speed Tax Refund Told Salcm-IUril-The Oregon lax commission said Thursday that taxpayers getting a re fund on their stale income ti.x this year can speed up the process by writing the word "refund" in the lower left corner on the outside of tlv envelope. The speedup Is possible, the commission said, because re fund requests have priority during the filing season from Jan. 3 through April 15. Re turns marked "refund" will be quickly sorted from the huge volume of mail and processed faster. In the past year some 600 000 returns were received and of this number 57 per cent were granted refunds. The sooner a taxpayer files the sooner he will receive his rcfuncj, if he has one coming Thornton's Wife Confined at Home Salem -IHPIt- Mrs. Robert Y. Thornton, wife of Oregon's torney general, has been con fined at the Thornton home here since the Nov. 8 election with a painful eye ulcer, Thornton said Thursday. She was unable to attend the swearing in ceremony Thursday afternoon at which Thornton began his third term as attorney general. She serv ed as her husband's campaign manager during the last election. MEDFORD often the case. old English and colonial America in a back - page Christmas spread of the Mail Tribune. We were, till our visiting daughter Olive and get-it-right minded husband Leif, leveled accusing finger at the lead-horse reins along the outer side, high on the wheeler's heads. Also, a la Grandma Moses, no hame- straps, neck-yoke or breeching on the pony-size wheelers, so necessary with the not too de pendable wheel-brake in stop ping he heavy loaded stage coach. The disturbing thought is this modernistic mind -twisting, nightmarish arty symbol ism edging in on the old get-' it-rightism of newspaperdom? Or is It a Kiplingish "East is east and west is west - never the twain shall meet," etc., that ivory-towers the editorial from the advertising and cir culation? For we still await that promised telephoned an swer to above. , F. J. Clifford ' Route 2, Box 200F Central Point, Ore. Bald Eagle Survey To the Editor: We read with much interest in Wednesday's Tribune a report the National Audubon Society will make five year research in co operation with officials of all state wildlife agencies and persons interested in the preservation and number of bald eagles. The survey would include productivity, longev ity and movements in migra tions. The emblem of the bald eagle has always impressed the writer from our earliest memories. All homage to the great American emblem, the bald eagle. May they ever in crease. Bert Kissinger 520 Boardman st. Medford. Five More Years To the Editor: Some of our Congressmen want more mon ey for Africa. They should get it. At the present rate of spending, it will take us an other five years to get Africa ready for the Communists to take it. Everett Acklin Ashland, Ore. Editorial Comment Rogue and Red Herrings As the world's population and its industrial needs sky rocket, can we continue to afford sylvian pleasures? This question arises naturally from the proposal of a Grants Pass group that a high very high dam be built on the Rogue, below the confluence of the Illinois, which would back water approximately 135 miles, wiping out the storied stream and its storied We tend to agree with Stats Rep. Clarence Barton, who feels the proposal is a red herring aimed at furthering bien nial efforts in the Legislature to get permission to take water from the Rogue at Grants Pass for industrial purposes. In either case, the Rogue would be ruined so we are talking about the same thing. This newspaper is, quite naturally, opposed to cither dam, red herring or not, or tin. withdrawal of Rogue water for industrial purposes. Yet the ultimate question remains of whether the Rogue can be forever protected as a wild area as the need for Oregon industrial against it. At any rate Rogueians will continue to try protecting it. They are beginning with attacks on the sanity of the Jose phine Countians who would build the dam. The Pacific Northwest does power. But the feasibility of doubtful. It likely would not which the river s normal flow, generate. The addition of other to change the situation, cither. While the Northwest needs it without the rape of the Rogue. In fact two large hydro projects in the immediate area PP&L's on the Coquille at Eden Ridge and Coos-Curry Co-op's on the Illinois near Buz zard's Roost are very probable in the next 10 years, neither despoiling the recreational potentials of Southwestern Oregon at the same time. If the Josephine county people are serious in the proposal. which we must continue to doubt, it still remains a bad one. MAIL JRIBUNE. MEDFORD, Yugoslavia Study in It Weaves. By PHIL NEWSOM UPI Foreign News Analyst For those who can take in large doses the contradictions of world affairs, let us con sider Yugo slavia. Last month, a man ifesto issued at 'the close of a sum m i t meeting of world Com munist lead ers in Moscow roundly c o n demned Yugo slavia for activity damaging to-"the unity of all the peace ful forces in the world." Chief instigator of this blast was Red China which accuses Yugoslavia of threatening the "ideological purity of Com munist doctrine." But scarcely had the dele gates left for home, than na tions of the Soviet bloc put on a display of friendship for Yugoslavia u n p r e cedented since Nikita Khrushchev's visit to Belgrade in 1955. Birthday Greetings On the occasion of the 15th birthday of Marshal Tito's Yugoslav government, Tito and Khrushchev exchanged warm messages looking to ward continued friendly rela tions in the "interests of world peace." This week, Tito mounted the rostrum of the Yugoslav General Assembly. He placed the blame for the summit manifesto's unkind words on Red China but then questioned the morality of any i Newsom In the Day's News By FRANK This modern world: Over in Placer county, in the rather wide-open spaces, a hitchhiker solicits a ride from a passing motorist. The motorist and his wife, as do so many of us in these days, look straight ahead and drive on. Whereupon The hitchhiker, who was carrying a rifle, leveled his weapon at the receding car and fired. The bullet struck the driver in the back of the head, - killing . him instantly. He toppled over against his wife, covering her with blood from his fatal wound. She managed to stop the careening car, got out of it and ran screaming down the road, away from the killer. fiHE hitchhiker then reload- cd his rifle and stood wait ing for the next passing motor ist. At that moment, a highway patrolman came along. He braked his car to a skidding stop, leaped out of it, his re volver in his hand, tackled the killer, disarmed him and took him off to jail where a check of his record revealed that he had been twice under observation for mental ill ness. rjiRAGEDY? It is double tragedy. There was a time in our friendly Western country when no motorist would have thought of passing up a pedes trian on a. long and lonely road. Why did this Placer county motorist pass up the pedestrian? The answer is quite simple, as everyone who drives our highways knows. In recent years picking up hitchhikers has become DANGEROUS. Too many of them have resources. growth presses more heavily need additional hvdro-elcctric the proposed Rogue project is pay out on the amount of power and the fall at the site, would claimed benefits do not seem additional power, it can get Cooi Bay World. OREGON EasE-Wesi others who would sign such a "downright untruth." This was a crack at Khrushchev. He said he agreed with Mos cow on most issues, anil then turned his fire on the West where he held "certain belli cose people" chiefly to blame for world tensions. One day later it was an nounced that the United States and other Western nations Cuba, Dominica Will Remain Problems for New President By LYLE C. WILSON Washington -fflPB- Fidel Cas tro and the Cuban shambles will be pebbles in the shoe of the next Presi dent of the United States No doubt about that. The Domini c a n Republic is likely to be come another pebble in the shoe. Domini- Rafael Trujillo is one of the bad guys of the Western Hemisphere against whom the good guys are ganging up. There is not much to be said in favor of Trujillo ex cept this: He is not in ca hoots with the Kremlin and his successor may be. When dictator Fulgencio Ba tista was running Cuba and JENKINS turned out to be robbers, kid napers and even killers. THERE is further tragedy in the fact that the killer had been twice under observation for mental illness and had been twice released. What to do with the mentally unbal anced? It seems unsafe to leave them on the loose. That, in itself, is another tragedy. FROM Washington: The country can expect "more and more accidents" in the air until something is done to relieve aviation traf fic density over large cities, Senator Mike Monroney' of Oklahoma says. the best solution he can see, the senator added, is to build more airports - and especially, new airports lo cated at a considerable dis tance away from New York City and other large urban areas. 1IHAT'S wrong? The trouble seems to be that there just isn't room in the air over our huge modern cities for the planes that seek to land there. And Our immense metropolitan cities are having plenty of trouble finding room enough to build the multi-lane free ways needed to get to their jobs in the morning and back to their homes in the evening. 1IHAT to do? ' Well ... It's beginning to look as if the city folks, most of whom have moved in from the country, are going to have to move BACK TO THE COUNTRY in order to find room enough to turn around in. Maurine Neuberger Leaves for Capital Portland tUPI) Sen. Mau rine Neuberger, (D - Ore.), third woman in the nation's history to be elected to a full six-year Senate term, left Thursday for the nation's cap ital with a promise to seek several goals including legisla tion to improve Oregon's economy. Mrs. Neuberger, who was elected co both a short and long term Nov. 8, will take the place of her late husband, Sen. Richard L. Neuberger, when Congress convenes Jan. 3. Mrs. Neuberger said she would work for legislation to improve the state's economy and bring more jobs. 'Crazy, Man' Says McQueen About Baby Hollywood (UPD Neiie Adams, wife of actor Steven McQueen, gave birth Wednes day to the corple's first son. "Crazy, man," drawled Mc Queen, star of the "Wanted Dead or Alive" television se ries, when informed of the birth of the eight-pound, five ounce boy. McQueen and his actress-wife also have a daugh ter, Terry, 20 months old. RETIRED PUBLISHER DIES Long Beach, Calif. (LTD - Harry B. Averill, 79, retired publisher of the Santa Paula (Calif.) Daily Chronicle, died Thursday, j Contradictions, as Ideological ram would loan Yugoslavia a whopping total of $275 mil lion dollars to carry out trade and currency reforms. Out of this welter of con tradictions two thoughts emerge. One is that temporarily at least Moscow has decided it is necessary to maintain at least a front of Community unity, despite Tito's refusal to Castro was promoting revo lution in the Cuban hills there wasn't much to be said in favor of Batista either, ex- pont this: Batista was not in cahoots with the Kremlin. If politicians and adminis trations can learn by experi ence. President-elect John r, Kennedy will consider devel opments in the Dominican tie- public in the light of experi ence in what used to De me Cuban Republic. Castro Posed as Anti-Red Castro came to power in the disguise of a democratic op ponent of dictatorship, torn- munism and the oppression which accompany both. Castro ballyhooed himself as a non Communist and enjoyed pow erful echoes of his ballyhoo in the United States. Batista fled Cuba on Jan. 1, 1959. The United States recognized Cas tro's revolutionary govern ment six davs later. Recognition was the deci sion of President Eisenhower and Secretary of S'ate John Foster Dulles. It is possible but not likely that Eisenhow er and Dulles would so quick ly have recognized Castro if they had been properly in formed of the background of The Beard. Incredible as it may seem to the taxpayers who pay for the mistakes of their govern ment employees, it is reason able to believe that neither the President nor the secre tary of state had the facts in the case. The alternative to that in credible situation would be even more incredible. It would be that the U.S. intelli gence agencies were unaware of Castro s background ana therefore, were not compe tent to warn Eisenhower and Dulles against him. Questions Raised These alternatives raise some questions: -Were the intelligence agen cies unaware and, if not, -Did Eisenhower and Dulles have full access to all intelli gence information? -Did the Central Intelli gence Agency andor the FBI submit reports in volume to the appropriate executive de partments and, if so, who ac- Court Asked To End Negro Evictions Cincinnati, Ohio - (UPD - The government has called upon a U.S. court of appeals to stop the eviction of about 700 Tennessee Negro share crop pers who claim they are being forced off the land this week end because they wanted to vote. Attorneys representing the landlords in .western Tennes see challenged the govern ment's contention. They in sisted in arguments before a packed courtroom that the evictions were not a conspir acy to interfere with Negro voting but merely the termi nation of contracts, which are made annually. Some of the Negroes have left the farms and are living in a tent city in Fayette coun ty, - Tenn. They are being cared for by donations of food and clothing. The contracts of other tenants end at mid night Saturday. cold cereal. "There was really nothing to it," he explains. "I simply mixed the mustard with the cold cereal and ate it" Elaine May, Nichols brilliant young partner, found the early going equally rough in Chicago. "There was only one way I could live there success fully on $12 a week," she recalls. "I kept a goat" ' Letter received hw u permit Moscow to dictate doe trine. The other is that apparent ly Oie West has decided thai some Communists are mors Communist than others. Or, put another way, it 0 willing to make a $275 mil lion gamble that eventuallj Tito can be weaned awaj communism and the influence of Moscow. . tually received the reports km what happened to them? -Did Eisenhower and Dullei see these reports and, if not why not? There is evidence, by impli cation at the very least, tha the FBI had Castro's numbei well before he took Havana on Jan. 1, 1959. The word ii Washington is that intelii gence reports on Castro'; Communist orientation wen submitted regularly for thi information of administralioi policy-makers. The word is not so cleai on who actually receive! these reports in, for example the State Department, no: what happened to them there after. All of the facts in thi case of Castro seem importan because another Cuba may bi upon us-in the Dominican Re public. Dellenback Attends Breakfast at SOC ; Ashland - John R. Dellen back. Republican state repre sentative from Jackson coun ty, attended a breakfas meeting Dec. 28 at Southen Oregon college to discuss thi Oregon state board of highe: education budget and its rela tionship to SOC. President of SOC and chair man for the event, Dr. Elmi N. Stevenson, introduced top ics relative to SOC's futun such as land acquisition, alio cations by the legislature foi classrooms, staff salaries class-room teaching loads, am building programs. Also present from SOC were Don Lewis, business manager; Dr. E. C. McGill, di rector of academic affairs and Hugh G. Simpson, direc tor of information, Judges' Retirement Fund Ruling Issued Salem-flJPII-Attorney Gener al Robert Y. Thornton sak Thursday that the Oregor judges' retirement fund is ex empt from claims against il brought by a person following the death of a judge. The exception is that a re tired judge's widow is enti tied to a pension. Thornton said a judge's in terest in the fund terminate.' at his death and therefore a warrant cannot be paid fol lowing such death. The fund is for retired circuit judges and retired justices of the state supreme court, $50,000 Worth of Permits Are Issued Approx i m a t e 1 y S50.00C worth of building permits have been issued by the city of Medford's building depart ment during the past 24 hours, including a $22,000 permit to erect a warehouse, The warehouse will be erected by Nye and Naumcs company at 619 South Grape st. Other sizeable permits were issued to John McCaf. dell to erect a $10,000 resi dence at 1341 Siskiyou blvd.j to B and G Properties Inc., for $3,000 to remodel a build ing at 1209 Court st.; and to the Citv of Medfnrri to erect a $1,000 addition to the Civil Air Patrol building at the air' port. ! Try and Stop Me By BENNETT CERF TVTIKE NICHOLS, a new favorite with theatre and night 1TX dub audiences, began his professional career in Ne York as a waiter in Howard Johnson's, and lived for ob month on mustard and v Edinburgh newspaper: J.in 1 ,bcrntd to your raj yer ago yen guarem "1 w" d' satisfied, my money would be refunded. Well, v .tni? . - S 0,1 econd bought, to save you bother, yotf may apply it to my next year-, subscription." Cue by Bauutt Cert SittrDxiM ay Stf restart IradJtii i 1