The Daily Banner, Greencastle, Putnam County, 30 September 1964 — Page 7
THE DAILY BANNER
GREENCASTLE, INDIANA
WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 30, 1964 Page 7
Struck By Train, polestine News
» " -me— ■» r—„
Injured Fatally
EAST CHICAGO. Ind. UPI— Eleven - year * old Jose Lozana was injured fatally Tuesday night when a Pennsylvania Railroad hit him as he walked on the tracks. Engineer Elmer Bandt. Fort Wayne, said he sounded his horn repeatedly when he saw the boy but the lad seemed to take no notice. He died in Gary Methodist Hospital about three hours after the accident.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Armstrong spent Sunday with Mrs. 1 Bessie Solomon. Saturday afternoon callers were Mrs. Edna Goodhart, Mrs. Jewel Walls of Danville and Myrtle Dalton of
Dugger. Ind.
Mr. and Mrs. Donald Blue of Indianapolis spent Sunday with 1 Mr. and Mrs. James White. Raymond Beck and family of Shelbyville and Mrs. Lowell Oliver and Mrs. Lee Oliver of near Morgantown spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Fred Back. Mrs. Ethel Eggers. Mrs. Eden Miles, Mrs. Fred Beck, Helen
Noll and Mrs. Henry Osborn attended the Friendly Sewing Club at the home of Gwen Huffman last Wednesday. The day j was spent quilting. Mr. Bill Terrell and family spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Beck. Mrs. Ott Hand, Mrs. Percy Rice and Mrs. Henry Osborn : were shopping in Terre Haute J | Saturday.
California Fire Loss $20 Million SANTA BARBARA, Calif.
UPI — Full containment was expected today of the Santa Barbara - Montecito fire, whose financial loss has been revised upward to about $20 million. An army of 2.800 firefighters remained on the fire lines. Control of the disastrous blaze was predicted for Thursday with mop-up operations anticipated to take days. The man-caused fire had been 90 per cent contained Tuesday night after a weeklong rampage in which it blackened about 73.000 acres of valuable watershed, destroyed 78 homes, a college dormitory and damaged other structure. One fireman was killed and
47 others injured battling the
flames.
The U. S. Forest Service and other agencies figured it cost about $2.2 million to fight the fire, which posed further possible hazards from flooding should heavy rains fall before
! re-seeding is completed.
Watershed loss was fixed at $13 million, although the acreage figure was revised downward after official computations of loss. Property loss remained
at aboutu $3.5 million.
Doing a Coldwater Wash
Coldwater, Michigan, which was originally named “Chuck-sew-ya-bish” (“the land of cold waters”) by the Potawatomie Indians more than a century ago, welcomed Mrs. America of
1964 as the city fathers cele- °
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Americans take three times as many tablets of straight aspirin than of any other pain reliever,
market studies reveal.
Last year we took an estimated 16,000,000,000 straight
aspirin tablets
• t,le to relieve ar-
i? thritic pain, | ' i headache, back- | _ . 2 ache and vari-v-n / ous other aches /A/ / and pains, and to reduce fever. K No other analgesic accounted for more than 5 billion tablets. And the figure of aspirin use is likely to go up this year. According to the U.S. Tariff Commission, 1963 production of aspirin totaled 28,285,000 pounds, up 1,121,000 pounds over 1962. Current production is ahead of last year’s. Not all of this total aspirin production goes into the familiar little white tablets of straight aspirin. Some of it goes into the mixed ingredient products, sold under various names at prices substantially higher than straight aspirin. The Lancet, British medical journal, lists 822 of these combination products which contain aspirin as the only, or principal, pain-relieving
agent.
Aspirin, discovered in 1853, has been used as a medicine for 65 years. In that time it is estimated that throughout the world more than half a trillion (500,000,000,000) straight aspirin tablets have been taken. On March 25, 1964, the Bayer Company, largest aspirin tablet maker, produced its 100 billionth. Aspirin has the longest clinical experience among the largest percentage of the world’s population of all modern drugs in
use today.
According to Drug Topics, an Industry' publication, Americans spent $350 million in 1963 for straight aspirin and aspirin containing products. Aspirin is truly the “original wonder drug.”
Two Americans Receive Medals SAIGON, Viet Nam UPI— Gen. William C. Westmoreland, commander of U. S. forces in South Viet Nam, pinned the Bronze Star Tuesday on two field officers who risked their lives to put a bloodless end to a mutiny by American-trained
mountain tribesmen.
They were Col. John Freund. Scarsdale, N. Y., who acted as go-between for the tribesmen and the Vietnamese command, and Lt. Col. Ervin R. Wendt of Milan, Mich., who served as
helicopter-borne courier.
brated Coldwater’s biggest claim to national fame: Washing Capital of the U.S. The purpose of the event was to prove that clothes can be washed sparkling clean in cold
water.
I WELCOME Mrs.America
ture proclaiming Coldwater “The Washing Capital of the United States.” From their respective states, eoopei'ative U.S. Senators sent a most unique collection of laundry. These included a Hawaiian muu muu, a Maine lobster bib, an Air Force Academy sweat shirt and a host of other washday items. Three weeks later, in the Senate Wing of the Capitol in Washington. Mrs. America returned tha clean cold-water laundered wash to 48 U.S. Senators as well as Congressmen and other high-ranking Washington dig-
nitaries.
Said Coldwater Mayor Olen Fry in the nation’s Capitol: “It is our hope that all Mrs. Americas join with us in celebrating
Vote... and the choice is vourst Don’t vote.., and the choice is theirs! 1 v Register... or yon have ns choke!]
Published *• • pub! I# »»rv!e* In eoop* • rtlien with Th* Ani*ne»n H.nUg* Found»t!on *nd Th* Advnrti.ing Council.
The town of Coldwater turns out to celebrate being named “The Washing Capital of the U.S.” Headlining the most memorable washday event since mother threw away her washboard, Mrs. America (Desree Jenkins) reigned for a day as First Lady over the most distinguished collection of laundry ever assembled. To mark the occasion, some of Washington’s leading lawmakers contributed representative items that were publicly washed in Coldwater with a product of the same name. The open-air demonstration also proved that politicians no longer are afraid to wash their dirty linen in public...when it’s for a good cause. To make the whole thing official, a resolution was passed by the Michigan State Legisla-
Senator Margaret Chase Smith of Maine receives her cold water laundered lobster bib from Desree Jenkins, “Mrs. America of 1964”. the way our city received it* name by doing things the Coldwater way in their own homa town, no matter where it ma/ be.”
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