2 The Newt-Review, Roieburg, v lis I ' lS i M'tVvv "l V f rm .aaa.j.. j.. : '"VViratfriiffi;tTiittfi'rift aaawawaaatflaf aawawaBaaawaaw tfwxS-. ROSEBURG REPRESENTED Mrs. Raymond Borden of Roseburg, vice c'nairman of the Douglas County Republican Central Committee, is shown greeting Rep. Edwin R. Durno of the 4th Congressional District at the Republican Women's Conference in Washington, D. C. Mrs. Borden, ot left, Mrs. Ruth A. Herndon of Corvallis and Mrs. Don Richardson of Salem, right, were all congratulated by Durno for their effective political work during the 1960 campaign. Durno was a speaker at a state breakfast for the women during the conference. U. S. Soldier Of Fortune, Cuban Officer Shot By Cuban Riflemen HAVANA (AP) William A. Morgan, American soldier of for tune who fell from national hero to traitor in the eyes of the Fidel Castro regime, was buried Sun day in a crypt beside the Cuban major executed with him. Friends of Morgan's Cuban wife attended the rites in Colon Ceme tcrv, and a Catholic priest offici ated. Mrs. Morgan, in hiding to escape captivity, did not attend the funeral. She and 10 others were convicted of treason along with her husband last week, and she was declared a fugitive. The five-man court at I.a Ca bana Fortress sentenced Morgan and Maj. Jesus Carreras to die Saturday after convicting them of aiding anti-Castro rebels in the mountains. A firing squad shot them in a dry moat outside the ancient fortress a few hours later. . , The military tribunal acquitted kroi nf ihn defendants. SaturdaV. gave Morgan's former driver 15 years in prison auer no nan etnto'n nvii lfnip . and or dered seven defendants to 30-year jail terms. Luis Carro, the Cuban lawyer who defended Morgan, descriDea Movie Showtime untimv. MARCH II. Ittl INDIAN THEATRE Doom open :. Com plete ihowi 7:0O-;!0. "The Coptoln'I It- STARLITE ORIVE IN Glt open :. Showl Hurt ll 7:00. "The Bntmy Ginerel" nd Duel in tht Sun" TRI CITY DRIVE IN (Trl-Clly) Show lorli At 7:00. "Tirllin tht Magrtlflctnl" nd "Tht Ltil . Voytgt" TUESDAY. MARCH tl, 1H1 INDIAN THEATRE Door I open 4:30. Com plctt thowl 7:00-tl3. "101 Dtlmttitnt" 7:45-10:00. 5TARL1TE DRIVE-IN GtM eptn 4:30. Show lljirtl or 7:00. "Tht Ehtmy uentrti ana "Duel In tht Sun" TRI CITY DRIVE IN-Show Ittrll It 7:00. "Ttrltn Tht Mtgnlllctnl" Ind "Tht Ltll Voyage" LI mil to1 Engagement start. WED, March 22nd ADMISSION ... $1.50 Kidditi undtr 12 . . . 75c MlilAMWYLERS PaillNTATIIH INDIAN THEATRE LOCKER BEEF Economy Grodt to 3)y)ib CUT, PACKAGED & QUICK FROZEN! USE OUR BUDGET PLAN CONVENIENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS BOYER MEAT CO. N. UMPQUA HWY. Ore. Mon., Mar. 13, 1961 Greeted In Washington the final moments before Morgan and Carreras became the 598th and 599lh unofficially listed vic tims of revolutionary firing squads. Morgan wore his military boots and faced death calmly, Carro said. Witnesses told the lawyer that Morgan joked with his exe cutioners and embraced the sol dier in charge. Carro said he telephoned Mor- fan s mother, Lorelta, In Toledo lut "she was so upset she couldn't finish the conversation." The mother had appealed to Cuban President Osvaldo Dorticos for mercy. He ignored the request. Morgan. 32. from Toledo. Ohio, got a dishonorable discharge from a U.S. paratrooper unit in japan and in 1957 joined Castro's revolu tion and after the overthrow of Dictator Fulgencio Batista stayed in Cuba. Two years later he lost his American citizenship fur fighting in a foreign army. But at the time he was enjoying a hero's stature for helping to decoy a group of anti-Ca,slro plotters into a trap. Later he was demoted to run ning a government frog farm, lie told newsmen, last fall that he was a staunch anti-Communist and didn't know how long he would last in his job. Camp Fire Girls Visit Legislature More than sixty junior high Camp Fire Girls from the Rose burg area were aboard chartered school buses today for their bi ennial visit to Salem and the State Legislature. Thev were met In Sa lem by Sen. Al Flegel, and taken on a tour of the Capitol building, after which they will have lunch in the Capitol lunchroom. Hiuhliehts of the tour will be seeing the Legislature In session, and possibly meeting -Gov. Mark Hatfield, if ihe schedule works out. lie will be presented with a box ot Camp Fire Girls candy. A visit to the Chcmawa Indian School is also on the Itinerary. Mrs. Oscar Amundson, executive secretary of tho Umpqua Council of Camp Fire Girls, and a number of the group guardians accompan ied the girls. They will return to Roseburg between 9 and 9:30 p.m., she said. The Camp Fire Girls of fice, on Rose St., between Cass and Oak, will be the disembark ation point. Hunting Films Shown Canadian hunting films taken by Dr. R. L. McDonald, a Roscburii dentist, will highlight the regular meeting of the Roseburg Rod and Gun Club Tuesday al 8 p in. at the clubhouse. The 1 II in "stars" are game in the Jasper Park area. The regular meeting will be followed by a Dutch lunch. v Lite-Weight, Grain-Fed Good or Choice .48 C ib OR 3 6323 Youth Booked For Vagrancy David Romaine Wood, 18, of 2013 NE Klamath Ave., and a 15-year-old companion were taken into cus tody by city police Saturday night, after officers received a report that someone was "messing around" some cars on a vacant lot off NE Winchester St. Officers called to the scene saw some persons running from the scene, and on giving chase came upon Wood and the other boy sev eral blocks away. The hour was 1:30 a.m. Wood was booked for vagrancy and tho other boy for curfew violation. Adolph Coors' Killer On Trial GOI.DF.N, Colo. ( AP) Joseph Corhelt Jr.. once described as a quiet sort who never bothered anyone, goes to trial in District Court today for the murder of millionaire Adolph Coors 111 little mure than a year ago. Once jury selection is complete, Dist. Attv. Ronald llardesty es timated the trial itself will take about one month. Hardesty has said he will not seek the death penalty. Corbett, 32, has refused to dis cuss the Coors case since his ar rest in a Vancouver, B.C., hotel Oct. 29. When returned here and charged with first degree murder, the fugitive pleaded innocent. Since then, he has remained si lent, refusing a lie detector test and staring mutely at officers when interrogated about the kid-nap-slaying. Coors, 44, was abducted the morning of Feb. 9, ' I960 while driving from his foothills home to the Adolph Coors Co. brewery and ceramics plant ' here where, he was board chairman. The day after Coors vanished, a note demanding a half-million dollars for his return was de livered to his wife. No further word ever came from the kid naper, and no money ever was exchanged. Six weeks later, the FBI dis closed that Corbett had left Den ver hurriedly on Feb. 10, the day after Coors disappeared. Corbett had escaped in 1955 from a prison at Chino. Calif., where he was serving a five-year-to-life term for murdering a hitch hiking Air Force sergeant. Corbett had fled to Denver and lived a quiet bachelor existence for more than four years. His trail eventually was traced to Atlantic City, N.J., then to Toronto, Winnipeg and finally to Vancouver. Coors' fate became known sev en months alter his abduction when his clothing and bones iden tified as his were found in a re mote mountain dump 25 miles from the abduction site. BOYS PICKED UP Two bovs, ages 13 and 14. were taken into protective custody for firing a .22 ritle in Gaddis Park in Item-hill i! Complaint was made by ' L'n-in .1 Ket 1 KI2 Kinlev Ave., that bullets were flying all around. The juvenile office and the boy's par ents were notified. They are to report to the juvenile otlicc with their parents today. AdttMiiimtnt) People 50 to 80 Tear Out This Ad . , , and mail it Unlay to find out how you can still apply fol ia $1,000 life Insurance policy to J help take care of final expenses without burdening your family. ' You handle the entire transaction by mail with OLD AMERICAN of i KANSAS C ITY. No obligation. No one will call on yout Writ loday, simply giving your name, address and year of birth. Mail to Old American Insurance Co., 4900 Oak, Dept. 1J3SB, Kan- s City, Mo. Plan To Increase Multnomah Solons Gets Cool Reception SALEM (AP) -A reapportion ment proposal by House Speaker itobert Duncan, D-Medford. that would give . Multnomah County more representation, got a cool reception today from - Chairman George Annala of the House Elec tions and Reapportionment Com mittee. ' .- , ' The plan came in the form of a memorandum to Annala,- D-Hood River, from Duncan. It, like other plans, would have little impact on Eastern Oregon. Duncan would give a joint Multnomah-Washington County. Dis trict an extra senator and would also join Multnomah and Clack amas counties for another repre sentative. . "In each instance we are actual- Governor Says Billboard Bill Is Inadequate SALEM (AP) Gov. Mark O. Hatfield said today that the bill board's legislation to regulate billboards on freeways is not ade quate. He told a press conference that the legislation would not meet fed eral standards and would not pro tect the state's scenic attractions. "I am informed that amend ments are being prepared that would make the legislation ade quate. I have long been for bill board regulation and control. We must protect our best interests, including the tourist industry and scenic attractions of the state," he said. The Senate Highways Commit tee held a hearing on the legisla tion today. On other matters, Hatfield said he still hopes the legislature will appropriate money to plan an ad dition on the rear of the Capitol to provide office space for legis lators. This is a better and cheaper solution, he said, than to move the secretary of state, treasurer and other offices from the Capitol to Ihe Labor and Industries Build ing. This building will be com pleted in April. : The Senate State and Federal Affairs Committee would put the offices in space which the gover nor has earmarked for the state Public Welfare Confmission which he plans lo move from Portland to Salem. Hatfield said President Kennedy is sound in limiting federal aid to education in public schools. "Let's consider this question on its merits," he said, "and not bring church-slate relations, civil rights and a lot of other issues into it. ' He said he favors the Idea of political parties adopting plat forms, but that they shouldn't try to bind all of their party members to support those platforms. He said they should guarantee that all kinds of ideas can be freely presented. Dope Peddler Back In Cell LOS ANGELES (AP) One of a dozen prisoners who escaped 18 days ago from County Jail was back in a cell today becauser "1 couldn't let my mother take the rap for me. Edward Lee Wing, 30, surren dered to police in San Pedro Saturday to testify as a defense witness at his mother's narcotics trial. v Wing, the eighth of the 12 es c a pecs returned to custody, told sneriti s deputies: "They found some of my stuff (heroin) in her place. She didn't know about it. 1 couldn't let her take the rap for me. His mother, Ida Wing, is charged with possession of nar colics. Washington Co. Sets Lay-Offs For Employes 1IILI.SBORO (AP) The Wash inglon County Court, faced with a deticit in Us road funds, savs it will lay off all 84 Road Depart ment employes for iwo weeks. The layolls will be spread over a two-month period and each worker will be furloughed for one week each month. The saving to the county in sal aries will amount to about $12,600, the court said. Last May, voters rejected a $341,000 levy for road construction work. The court said that the county's growth has far out stripped its financial ability to provide services. Only the voters ran provide the solution, the court added. Laos Ex-Premier Says Peace Depends On U.S. PIINOM PENH, Cambodia (AP) Ex-Premier Souvanna Phouma ot Laos said today that peace in his war-torn homeland depends on whether Ihe U.S. government will truly support real neutralism in Laos. Souvanna, who agreed last week .with a representative of Ihe West- ; ern backed government of Prince Bonn Oum to try to secure a truce between the pro-Communist rebels and the government forces. jwas critical of I'.S. policy toward Laos in recent years. I Council Meets Tonight The Roseburg City Council will 'hold its regular meeting at 7:30 I tonight in the council chambers at I the corner of SE Rose St. and SK ' Lane Ave. The council faces a light agenda. with regular committee reports tak ins the headline of action. ly giving Multnomah County an other senator and representative hecatise the nnnulation balance is overwhelmingly in favor of Mult- nomah County, Annala said. .'He said it is obvious that1 the election odds would favor a can didate from Multnomah County in these races. r Republican House Leader F. F. Montgomery of Eugene said he personally could not conceive of a representative running in a Clackamas-Multnomah district of some 635,000 persons. The committee's plan would be to give the Polk County Senate seat to Washington County and then combine Polk and Yamhill coun ties into one district. . Duncan, instead, would give the Polk seat to the joint Multnomah Washington district and then com bine Polk with Lincoln and Tilla mook counties. In the House, the committee plan would combine Wasco, Hood River, Sherman, Wheeler, Morrow and Gilliam counties into one dis trict with two representatives.! Wasco and Hood River each now have one and the other four coun ties share one. This extra repre sentative would go to Clackamas County and a seat now shared by Yamhill and Washington counties would go to Washington alone. Duncan concurred in the plan to give the Yamhill-Washington seal to Yamhill. However, he would take the other seat and give it to the joint Clackamas-Multnomah district. Montgomery said he had re ceived a verbal' opinion from the office of Atty. Gen. Robert Y. Thornton that the House Repub lican plan and the committee's plan, both almost the same, were unconstitutional. Thornton would not comment on this but said a written opinion was being prepared and would be issued soon. State Plumbers Out On Strike PORTLAND (AP) Some 1.400 plumbers -and steamfitters in Portland and Vancouver, Wash., went on strike today in support of a demand for more money. And they promptly began talk ing with individual shop operators in an effort to crack the solid front of the employers associa tion. ' Merle Howden, assistant busi ness agent for the steamfitters, said all Portland and Vancouver shops were picketed. Pickets will nol be placed at the work sites immediately, he said, permitting other crafts to continue at jobs such as the Hilton Hotel in Port land. He said that Portland shops were working on contracts as far away as balem. Corvallis and Mc Minnville and these were affected although they were not picketed at me site. Current pay is $4.08 an hour and the union asks 10 cents additional now and a 10-cent pension pay ment starting Sept. 1. Employers offered 5 cents now and 10 cents later for health and welfare if business warranted it. Howden said individual shop op erators were being asked to sign on the union's terms. A second major work tielip was threatened as Associated General Contractors and the Hoisting and Portland Engineers Union were in bogged-down contract talks. Fed eral Mediator Leroy Smith sched uled a meeting this afternoon with representatives of the two sides. MundtSays Ike No Longer I red WASHINGTON .(AP)-Sen. Karl Mundt, R-S.D., gladly reports that former President Dwight D. Ei senhower isn't mad at him. Mundt says he has a "Dear Karl" letter from Eisenhower to prove it. Mundt created some fuss two weeks ago when he reported in a newsletter to constituents that Eisenhower was critical of the way President Kennedy's admin istration was going. Eisenhower disavowed that. In this week's newsletter, Mundt said Sunday "President Eisenhow er's assurances last week to a na tional TV reporter that my report summarizing our visit is a closed incident and that our friendship remains unimpaired was reaf firmed this week bv a 'Dear Karl' letter from Ike reaffirming the fact." Khrush Said Interested In Continuance Of Talks WASHINGTON (AP) Soviet Premier Khrushchev is reported to be interested in continuing be-lowthe-siimmit discussions on main cold war issues. Informants "said Sunday Khrush chev expressed this interest dur ing a four-hour meeting Thursday al Novosibirsk with Llewellyn E. Thompson, U.S. ambassador to Moscow, Thompson went to the Siberian city to deliver to Khrushrhev a message from President Kennedy on his views of the world situation. Budget Meet Slated The Roseburg School Budget Com mittee will enter its third session of preparing the District 4 budget ! tonight. The meeting will start at 1 7:30 in the District 4 admimstra l tion ollice on W. Harvard Ave. I The committee is currently work ing on the estimated expenditures portion of the budget. AOULT FILM SLATED A public showing of "Time And Two Women," American Cancer i Society film, will he sponsored by! the Winslon-Dillard Tosstmistress I Club at the Rrnetta Theater in i Winston, Tuesday at tl p.m. The I film is for adults only. ! DOLLARS FOR HOSPITAL GROWTH are being sought by locol residents and campaign workers for the Mercy Hospital Expansion Fund. Here, Gordon Carlson, Men's Division chairman, left, and Mrs. B. L. Martin, Women's Division chairman, center, are assisted in worker distribution of proposed contributor cards. Kickoff for the final phase of the drive to attain the $250,000 goal needed in the community to match an equal federal grant is scheduled to begin with a breakfast for all workers 8 a.m. Morch 21. Gifts moy be given ds pledges spread over a three-year period, immediate cash contributions, or by memorial gifts. C. M. McDermott stands at right. (News-Reveiw Photo). Community Concert Series Scheduled Three concerts in addition to the one previously announced were se lected at the close of the Rose burg Community Concert Associ ation membership drive Saturday evening. Miss Gladys Strong, asso ciation president, reported a very successful campaign. Lawrence Winters, well-known negro baritone, is scheduled for appearance here in late October or early November. Winters was a hit in Edwin Lester's West Coast revival of "Showboat" this fall. Leading baritone of the Hamburg Statsoper, he is rated a great fa vorite as guest artist with the San Francisco and other opera j companies. ( This will be followed in Febru ary by the previously announced "Caledonia!" featuring singers and dancers of Scotland. Kovach & Rabovsky and Com pany, an ensemble of five dancers will appear in March. Hungarian horn and trained in Leningrad and Moscow, Nora Kovach and Istvan Rabovsky will bring the Russian ballet tradition to the concert stage. Violinist David Abel, appearing in April, will complete the series. Abel played with the Minneapolis Symphony in Portland this year, and has since embarked on a sold out series of solo engagements across America. He has received acclaim by top music critics. Oregon Population Gains 327 Percent WASHINGTON (AP) In the first 60 years of the 20th century, the population of Washington in creased 451 per cent, Oregon 327 per cent and Idaho 312 per cent, the Census Bureau reported Sat urday. The populations of Arizona and California grew the fastest during the 60-year period 958 per cent apiece the bureau said. The I960 population for Wash ington in 1960 (in rounded thou sands) was 2.853.000, compared to 518.000 in 1900, an increase of 2, 335,000. The figures for Oregon were 1.769,000 in 1960 and 414,000 in 1900. up 1,335,000. -.. The Idaho count was 667.000 in 1960; 162.00 in 1900, an increase of 505,000. Sutherlin Man Given 60 Days And $200 Fine George Washington Enlow, 35, of Sutherlin was fined $200 and sen tenced to 60 days in Ihe Douglas Countv jail hv District Judge Ger ald R. 1 Hayes. Enlow was convicted by a trial jury on the charge Friday after noon. The state was represented by Verden Hockelt and the de fense by William Jones. Enlow had pleaded' innocent on arraignment and the jury trial was set. He has been committed. Samuel J. Brittian, 24, Canyon ville, has been booked at the coun ty jail on a Lane County warrant charging failure to provide for chil dren. He was arrested by Don Sop cr, resident deputy at Canyonville. Thief Robs Blind Tots SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP)-Some- body stole Ihe coats and sweaters of 12 Berkeley school tots picnick ing at Alum Rock Park Sunday. The kids couldn't describe the thief. They arc blind. MISSIONARY SLATED The Rev. John Hiehert, a mis sionary lo Nigeria, Africa, will he at the Dillard-Winston Methodist Church in Dillard, Tuesday, at 7 p.m. to speak and show movies of his missionary work. The public is invited to attend, reports Phebe McGuire, correspondent. , Do FALSE TEETH Rock, Slide or Slip? r ASTEFTH. n Improved powder to b aprtnlUKl on upper or low or platra, hoUU (ft 1m trth mure UrmW In place. Do not iifif, tiip or rock Ni mimtnr, oo-t piT tMt or Online. FAS TEFTH li nlkallnr 1 non-arid). Dol not iKxir rherk "Jti ortnr" ion Uirn hmtthl. OM PASTKKTH it ftnf (rue counter. Final Drive Slated Family Separated 41 Years Ago Slated For Reunion At Easter PORTLAND (AP) A search through a mountain of telephone directories led Orman J. Schafer to six brothers and sisters he was separated from 41 years ago. "1m flying high," said Schafer, 43, a clerk for a railroad here. "I couldn't feel any other way. We're going to have a family re union at taster. Schafer spent the weekend here with a brother, Clarence Cha boude of Klamath Falls, and a sister, Delia Deppen, of Ander son. Calif. They, like the other brothers and sisters, had been looking for Schafer for years. Schafer said they all had been separated and placed in foster homes after their mother died when he was two years old. The others managed to track each other down over the years. But to Schafer, his background was a mystery. His foster mother, Schafer said, had- only hinted at the existence of his real family. The search be gan in earnest, he added, after she died several months ago. Schafer's - wife remembered having seen, in the possession of his foster mother, a letter signed by someone named Chahoude. It turned out that the letter was from his father, Schafer said, who had placed the children in the foster homes and died a short time later. Mrs. Schafer set lo work look ing through telephone books. Nine hours and 34 tele- fihone directories later, she final y ran across a Chaboude, Archie Chaboude of Mt. View, Calif. He turned out to be a cousin, who put Schafer in touch with his brother Clarence at Klamath Falls. The Easier reunion will be held at the home of another sister, Sadie Costley of Cayucos, Calif. Negro Money Finder Offered Guard Job LOS ANGELES (AP)-The man who turned in almost a quarter million dollars lost by an ar mored car company decides to day if he wants to go to work lor the firm. Brink's, Inc. offered Douglas W. Johnson, 50, a Job as guard for $90 a week. Johnson is un employed. When he works, as a janitor, he makes $100 a week. He went into seclusion Sunday to think the offer over. Johnson found a sack contain ing $240,000 in easily negotiable $10 and $20 bills Friday on a Los Angeles street where it had fall en from the open rear door of a Brink's armored car. He called the FBI and turned in the money. Saturday Brink's offered him the job and offered a four-year college scholarship for his son, Richard, 16. does VETTING Up Rights MAKE YOU FEEL OLD Thousindt are now discover toe ho much tronirr nd brtttr thfT ran frrl bf fombtunt ordinary Kidnpjr or Ulidder Irritation!. These Irritation! often ocrur after 3.1. nd mar make rou ten and. nerrous from too freouent. burnmt or lichlni urination both dar and nitht, Secondarily, you may Iwe ileep and mf fer from Heftdarhe. Backache and f el old. tired, depressed. In uch Irritation. CY8TEX UEiiallT brine fnst. relulnc comfort b? curbln Irrliatlnt term in atroni. icid urine and or tiYini analteie pein relief. Rate (fr jotmi or old. Oet CY8TSJL at atuiiiiU. Feel better I ail Science Shrinks Piles New Way Without Surgery btops Itch M Tor, .v T. aui-For th firt time ecience ha found a new heal m it juMunce with the ton ihinf ability to shrink hemor Thoida, top itchinc, anf : ehevt pam without lUTftrry. In case after ca.e. while irently relieving pain, actual reduction (ahnnkape) took place. Moit amaiing of all retuluwert Also attending will be three other brothers: Walter Chaboude of Three Rivers, Calif.; Albert Cha boude of Pendleton, Ore.; and, Martin Heskitt of Mansfield, Ohio. Now that he has found his fam ily, Schafer said he was thinking about changing his name. Liz Continues To Show Gains LONDON (AP)-Ac(ress Eliza beth Taylor was breathing natu rally today, minus the SDecial throat lube she used for eight days in her light against double pneumonia. Removal of the lube in a five minute procedure Sunday at lha London Clinic was a sign of further progress in the movie star's recovery. Her critical ill ness had made necessary an oxygen-pumping electronic lung ma chine, a blood transfusion and intravenous feeding, now ended. "Miss Taylor is now going along very nicely," said a spokesman at the exclusive hospital. Miss Taylor, 29, conversed free ly during the day with her hus band, singer Eddie Fisher, and her parents. Fisher praised the team of doc tors and nurses and the clinic staff who had fought to keep his wife alive. He added: "There is now everv reason to believe that she will re cover fully from the dreadful ill ness which so very nearly took her life more than once this past week." He also expressed appreciation "to the many thousands of friends throughout the world, unknown to us personally, who by their mes sages of prayer and encourage ment and faith helped us impor tantly to keep alive our own some times faltering hope." HEMORRHOIDS PILES ore being corrected through the use of the latest approved electronic techniques. Descrip tive booklet on request. E. R. REYNOLDS N. D D. C. Proctology 1742 Willamette Dl 3-8131 Eugene, Oregon (Pud AHvertiKmtntl AMAZING PSORIASIS STORY Jan. 10. ma Pittsburah. Ta. "Doctored tor psoriasis 30 years. Spent much monev to no avail. Then used GHP Ointment and Tablets (or 2 'weeks. Scales dis appeared as if by magic. In S weeks skin completely cleared and clean. First time in 30 years. Thanks tor your marvelous prod ucts." This much abbreviated re port tells of a user's success with a dual treatment for psoriasis now made available to all sufferers. Full Information ai.d details of a 14 day trial plan from Car.am -', "cpt. il'JC', Hockport, Mass Relieves Pain to thorough that luffereri made aMonishme; Maemnu like "Pilea have reaped to be a problem! The lerret ta a ne healing mb itance ( Bio-Dyne! dmcorery ol a world-famoua research inatituta. This ubtanc ta now availablt in $uppoMtorf or emf timr form under the name Pr,ptftn H. At all drug counters. t