Word: ointments
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Columbus, Ohio's Warren-Teed Products Co., which had been selling a chlorophyll healing ointment without a Rystan license. Lever Brothers has already signed a licensing arrangement for Chlorodent which will bring Rystan nearly $1,000,000 by the time it expires this summer. Rystan's President Ryan has been trying to line up other licensees, but hasn't had much success. Bristol-Myers and Whitehall, already market-testing chlorophyll variations of Ipana and Kolynos, are not rushing to sign up with Rystan; Kolynos, for one, thinks that the patent may not cover its product. Last week...
...wars," they prayed to God it would be so. More important, they believed that victory, purchased at so fearful a price, had given them a second opportunity to create, at last, that free, new world of peace . . . But no. There is a fly in the ointment. Once more we seem doomed to repeat that awful cycle of murder and destruction . . . Why then should we not be fatalistic, silent, stodgy-even weary...
...their cases of osteoarthritis (by far the commonest form of arthritis, for which ACTH and cortisone are useless). ¶ After an executive's son fell into a poison ivy patch, researchers of the National Lead Co. went to work, announced last week a quick cure for ivy poisoning: ointment containing a salt of zirconium...
Nevertheless, as it stood, it was one of the most remarkable propositions in the history of wars; no victorious nation had ever presented to a beaten enemy such magnanimous terms after so savage a fight. Instead of a lash, it poured out ointment. It forgave Pearl Harbor. The idea was as revolutionary as Christianity itself. A "particular opportunity" had been grasped and, as a result (Dulles hoped), an astute offensive had been launched in Asia...
First noticeable fly in the peace ointment : the proposal does not specify which "five powers" are supposed to sign the peace pact, but probably intends Red China to be one of the five. Much of the message reads like all other Soviet "peace" proposals, but it also includes a muddily worded suggestion for prohibition of atomic weapons and "establishment of inspection over the implementation of such prohibition." In the past, the Russians have fought any proposal for inspection tooth & nail. There was enough bait in the proposal to make the West look up with interest-and caution...