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The Daily Mail from Hagerstown, Maryland • Page 35

Publication:
The Daily Maili
Location:
Hagerstown, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
35
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

PORTY-THE DAILY MAIL, Hagerstown, Md. Wednesday, Fabcuory 11, 1974 Obituaries MtM 0. Routtaho Mrs. Mabel 0. Routzahn, 93, of 143 East Anlletam died Wednesday morning al Colton Manor Nursing Home.

Born In Kunkslown, she was a daughter of Francis R. and Ara R. Snyder Cartee and the widow of Wie J. Roulzahn. She was a member of St, John's Lutheran ftiurch.

Slie is survived by a daughter, Miss Frances Roulzahn, al home; and a brother, Paul 1,. Carlee of Hagcrslown. Services will be held on Friday a( 3 p.m. at the Prince of Peace Chapol at St. John's Lutheran Church.

The Hev. Martin L. Rotbenberger willof- ficialc; burial will be in Rose Hill Cemclery. Friends may call al the residence, 143 East Anlielam on Thursday evening from 7 to 9. Arrangements were handled by Ihe Gerald N.

Minnidi Funeral Home. 305 North Potomac St. Liltta B. BERKELKY SPRINGS. Va.

-Mrs. l.illie B. McBcc.il. of Berkeley Springs, died Tuesday at Valley View Nursing Home. Born in Morgan County, slit was a daughter of Waller ami Annie Stotler Lopp.

She was a member of Ihe Alpine United Mcthodisl Church. She is survived by her liu.s. band. Marlin IV. Mcjkr: sons Martin W.

McBce Jr. of Mar- linshurg. and Bobbie L. McBec of Berkeley Springs: daugblers. Mrs.

Ida (Jray of Berkeley Springs, and Mrs. Marian Park of Berkeley Springs: a sisier Mrs. Belly McDce of Berkeley Springs: brothers. William Lopp of Berkeley ami Russell I.opp ol Ciimbcrliinil. and 12 granilriuMren.

and we great-grandchild. Services will be Jic-W on Ml Zion United Methodist Thursday al 2 p.nr. The Hev. fdiot Wit tin it 80 HARTFORD. Conn, un John E.

Norton, one ol Klliol Ness' moonshine still-smashing FBI agents during Prohibition died Monday al 80. tyr fetHMu ItU Wjnj Wti. fMMf, Inn INMM, vrnM, $1-55 KISER WARING AID SERVICE 107 N. Fotemte St. 733-0900 Stick up! Kallogs's 1 Stick Up lor Srnkfdit coupon ad tn (liis paper.

Henry Fisher will officiate; burial will be in Spohrs Crossroad Cemetery. The family will receive friends al Hunter Funeral Home tonight from 7 to J. Memorial dotations may be made to Spohrs Crossroad Cemetery Memorial Fund. Mrt. WUM CLEAR SPRING Mrs.

Julia frene Wiles, 65, of Ri. 1, died Tuesday al Ihe Washington County Hospital. Born in Virginia, she was the daughter of William and Margaret Whitcsell Johnson. She is survived by her husband. Charles Wiles: two sons.

Charles W. Wllet of Clear Spring and Ralph A. Wilei of Hagerttown-, two daugbten, Mrt. Dora L. Bimard and Mlu Ida M.

Wiles, both of Clear Spring; Iwo brothers, Herbert Johnson of Smilhsburg and Dolmar Johnson of Security. Services will be held Friday at 3 p.m. Irom the Rest Haven Kuneral Chapel. The Rev. J.

Russell Butcher will officialc. Hurial will be in Cedar I-awn Memorial Park. The a i will receive friends at Ihe funeral home Thursday evening from 7 to 9. William G. Dam K'illiam (i.

Dean, 57, ot Frederick died Tuesday afternoon at the V.A. Center in Marlinsburg. W. Va. Born in Romney.

W. he was Ihe son of Mr. and Mrs. Oorgo W. IX'an.

lie was a member of Ihe i a in Homnoy and the I.oyaj Order of Moose in Hagcrslown. For 20 a he had owned and operated his own taxi service, lie was a veteran of World War II and Ihe Korean War. Me is MH-vim! by his wile. Tlieltn.i llolsinger Dean, one (laughter. Julie A.

Dean of a Mrs. Shirley Marlin of llummelstowri. Iwo brrxheis. Brady Dean and Jesse Dean, both rtf Romnov: one Mst.T. Mrs.

Albert Maphis nl Hrnnnry. and one grandson. (u.iveside services will be held at Rest Haven Cemetery f'riiiay at 2 p.m. fir. DeWltl Miller will officiate.

I- nends may call al any liir.c al the Minnich Funeral Hnme 415 K. Wilson Rlvd, Mrt. Hazal C. Mrs. II.17CI Catliprine Kcllr.

n( 17HT Virginia dieil at Colccn Manor Mornlay evennifi. Biun in Williaitisjioil. she was the dnilgrilcr of t.co Catherine Collins Thompsun. She wj preceded in death by her huslwnd. Robert I).

Kclli'r. She was a member of St. Augustine Catholic Church She is sin ived hv one sun. Rnlxrl Keller of Kliicnit City: une sister. Mrs.

Marjiaret cif llaperstown; one brother, Krank Tliompson ol A a a RranilL-hhdren and eighl great-grandchildren. Requiem Mass will be iTlelii.ilod by Kallier Alfred SinilliTliiirsitn III a.m. at SI. Aiiuiisiine's CatlKihc Ctiurcli. Hunal will be in I i ietni may call at tlirt'ntf- 111:111 Kuneral Hume today 2 to 4 7 lo 5 jvm Prayers will be recited at the funeral lltjs eveniiifj at fi strving Horn a CokJ Subt Mtatbalt GENUINE HOMEMADE LASAONA CORSI'S PIZZA 1976 JEEP 4j Juit tor the tun of it, come in and drivt warn you once you get if behind the wheel, you'll of Jaw We cm cure that with Special DeateT alfJeepc through Feb.

29, 19781 SPECIAL! thil IMriW WOMt I MOW BltW, Wl wMI tttf ntMf U7I.OO witfc Kelitt I ittKbftMti ht Mry ANTIETAM MOTORS, DMJ Hwy. (Rt. 40 Etttl i I- 7IMOM Baby bom hen lacks natural immunity BALTIMORE (AP)-Baltimore doctors in nously to keep a lO-nxwUnjld baby named Jennifer alive long enough to come up iome technique to provide her body with the natural Immunity it lacks. Until she waj 5 months old, the little girl, born In Washington County General Hospital in ifaRerstown last April appeared health. The wiite-eyed, curly-headed, litte girl was born without the natural body defenses which protect other babies from disease and every day the doctors and nurses at City Hospitals fight to protect Jennifer from bacteria and viruses that could kill her.

Jennifer, whose last name was withheld by the hospital, is kept in a totally germ-free isolation unit on the pediatrics ward. To enter her room. Ihe hospital staff scrubs up as if xoing into surgery. Physical contact is kept at a bare minimum. Family visits are limited to twice a week.

Doctors say that although Ihe.v have no officials statistics, only about 30 infanls in the world ure believed to have eon- i birth defect. According to Mathuram Saa-' thosam. Jennifer's physician, of all the babies born in Baltimore hospitals in a year, only one is likely lo have the disease, known as combined immune deficiency. What Jennifer's tiny body lacks is immunoglobins. which help make anllbodies, and cel- luar immunity, which helps identify foreign cells.

Since then, however, she has h.id Iwo bouts with a type of pneumonia which had to be treated with petnlamidine. a special drug Mown in from the Center for Disease Control in Atlanta. Doctors have been giving Jennifer immunogtobins. but they sure how best lo provide her with cclluar immunity. "There are a lot of experimental procedures." said Santlrasham.

"And. we are call- nig around the counlry gelting opinions. We do no: know which w-e II use." The neditrician. who also leaches at Johns Hopkins, said a hor.e marrow transplant, used must of the surviving cases, has been ruled out in this one. "Ti.

this transplant, ue need a person who is identical lo Jennifer in all aspects. A sibling would be the besl donor, lint she does no! have one." he said. SoiiH'limes. bone marrow of a State-appointed panel bocks nuclear energy development ANNAPOLIS (AP)-The state-appointed panel on nucle- an energy held a flry public hearing Tuesday night as panel members backing nuclear energy development clashed headon with consumer advocates. Dr.

Robert H. Roy, chairman of the Panel on Public Policy on nuclear Enegery for Electricity, summed up the group's findings wllh a full scale endorsement of nuclear energy. "We think taking alt factors Inlo accounl, at the present time nuclear power is more economical lhan coal. We think further thai the power needs of Ihe next couple of decades will have to be met with a combination of nuclear power and coal," be said. Roy added that it was the panel's preliminary finding that the total energy needs of (he slale can only be met using a combination of nuclear power and coal over the next 25 years.

The panel found Itself constantly on the defensive as most Ihe SO people In attendance at the public hearing opposed nuclear energy development. Thomas Myers, a professor of nuclear physics at Loyola College said he for one opposed the panel's recommendations. "This panel either under estimates the impact thai its report is going (o have or seriously misunderstands the controversial nature of the Issue hand," he said. "It doesn't begin Ihe substantive kinds of analysis which are necessary to present both sides of this question to the public In a formal which can be understood by all. particularly public officials.

Roy said nuclear plants are a a a "Everything we read and heard regarding the safety of nuclear power in operation led at lo believe they are acceptably safe-much safer, (or example, than many other technologies which are a by society." He added ttat the automobile killed people last year. "Deaths from nuclear power plants so far have been zero." Roy emphasized that there are several unanswered problems with waste disposal from nuclear plants. He said Ihe report advised that proper safeguards must be discussed by both national and international officials. The hearing was the first in a series of six whkti will be held across the stale. The panel will meet again next week in Cambridge.

Roy said the final report of the panel will be sub- milled to Gov. Marvin Mande! on March I. 13 Maryland motorcycle gang members indicted for murder RICHMOND, Va. I A Seated indictments returned by a grand jury Monday cited 13 more members of a Maryland motorcycle gang on charges of murder, robbery and maiming in connection with a March 1974 Shootout at a Confederate Angels club here. Seven persons have already been convicted ar.d given long- term sentences in connection with the incident, in which subsequent testimony has shown the Pagans of Baltimore and Washington may have been Irving lo prevent a conversion ijf the Confederate Angels of Richmond into a Hell's Angels club.

'llw identity of the persons named in Monday's indictments were kepi from the public. Commonwealth's Any. Aubrey Davis Jr. said Tuesday, because authorities leared disclosure inigiit sciul some of Ihc subjects mlo hiding, lip' said Ihose indie-led were charged one count ot murder, tuo ol robbery and inree of maiming. Included among those indicted.

Davis said, was John Vwnon "Satan" Marrow, president of Ihe Pagans, who was indicted on two charges of robbery. Marrow has previously been indicled in connection iviih Ihe shooting, but is fighl- ins extradition from Maryland. According lo Ihe testimony of a key prosecution wilness during one of the trials, Pagans came lo Richmond because of a false rumor that a chapter of tlie Hell's Angels motort-yle gaiis; would be established here. inlnc-ss. also a member nl ilie Pagans, testified thai the tv.mtrd fo nrcvr-nl formation of Hell's Angels chapter hut said there were no plans lor any shooting.

II w.is liip nigln of March 4. 1974 a Saturday thai a fr.uiji of Pagans rushed into the shooling slarled. jili-c siiiii. Before the meiee uv-er. man was killed, "nt- was i a uutiiKls, and were rubbed Alter the shooting, police seized a large number of weapons and several hundred rounds of ammunition from the clubhouse.

Those indicted Monday along with Marrow were identified as: Salvador "Abe" Infanlolia. who is being held in a Washing- Ion jail on another charge; Richard Lyie "tiit" Hughes, U'Jis Frederick "Little Lou" Bauer ami Gary Lee "Graveyard" Delp, who were ali arrested by Man-land State Police Tuesday; Chester Llovd "Frost" Dobbins; "Loader" lladdaway: John 'I'IIOHUS Mck" Nicholson; Donald "Torch" Heller and Kirbv Keane "Bear" Keller. Also. Guy Julian "Frer.chie" Fruncok: Francis Edward "Domino" Shiford; Donald Leonard "Greek" Morley and Dennis Malhcw "Pompano Ked" Kenny. Davis said mosi of Ihose indicted Mondav lived in Ihe Washington-Baltimore area.

Admitted white collar criminal offers services to businessmen lAl'i-At the height of his financial eir.pirc. Kline was worth an e.vti- itiated SH million, was a friend of I.i. (iov. Blair Lee III. had sel lile and was known as Ihe boy wonder of Maryland ii- naiKi 1 Then came the collapse in nliii A six month sentence in Securities and Commission case.

Bankruptcy. genetically close relative can 1 material irnppmgs of a jei- bo but in Jennifer's ease no une matches her close enough. Without a close match, her body would soon reject the foreign bone marrow. Sanlhosam sai.l. II a a a is successful, the body begins producing innmnioglobins and itself as well as cellular im- Jiiunily.

Santhosam said efforts to transfuse tbymus. transplant livers and provide extracts ol ci'rlain blood prtwiucts have met with little success. He said he knows of only I wo babies who survived this method He said if the decision is ntaile tu try any of these procedures, (he donor would have to be a siilltwrn baby, a baby who has died from sonic other cause or an aborted fetus. do not know which i pel "I in vvurkirjfi he aiidnl "I rajiiy the travelling. I c'ujuy ihr- mirk Jt's int easier In give advice to a c-linnl Hint you didn't lake a car Kline brunght him rlo.selopnhltcoffi- cials si'di the liruieiianl jwviTiwr and almost gut him appointed Mai viand banking commissioner.

At the trial. Kline also lold of his (or a fast-pai ed lifestyle. Mjmi'tliing lie nou savshc can without. "I '1'in'l need the airplanes. Post made more money during strike WASHINGTON (API The Washington Post Co.

made more money In the last three months of Ifli than during the same period a year earlier even though most Iti craft workers, including pressmen, were on strike. Company officials said strike insurance covered much of the paper's lost revenues, and they cited savings on wages and benefits not paid to the striking workers during the October through December period. However, the Posl neporied Tuesday that earnings for the year were down from fU.4 million in 1974 to $12.0 million last year. Per share profits declined from KM to Fourth-quarter earnings were $1.19 per share, up from ll.M in im. The Post said the strike, which began when pressmen walked out on Oct.

1. reduced the firm's net income by 000 in Ihe fourth quarter. The firm said savings on wages and benefits' amounted to $6.5 million. Post Ceneral Manager Mark Meagher said savings on pressroom labor costs during 1976 would more than offset the Income decline. He said the Post plans to use 23 per cenl fewer pressroom employes lhan needed under the old pressmen's conlract.

Post officials said earnings from the firm's magaxine and broadcast subsidiaries accounted for 75 per cent of the Post i a operations were less profitable than broadcast properties, said Ihe Post. The Posl owns Newsweek as well as the Trenton Times newspaper. The Post said fourth-quarter earning figures include strike insurance payments of $600,000 and business interruption insurance of more than $1 million collectible due to damage done by pressmen to Posl pressroom equipment. The Posl said a slrike against the Bownler Mersey Paper in Canada, in which Ihe Post holds a 49 per cenl interest, reduced income in Ihe last quarter by $700.000. The strikes together cost stockholders' 32 cents a share, said the Post.

The Post also released Inures which placed damage to llic pressroom at almosl "00. Most craft workers still are slrike at Ihe Post. The newspaper has hired permanent replacements for the pressmen. com- cU-d in liis activities. Al Ilic Andersnn trial.

Kline his net wurth al up to SH ttiicn w.is al his znntli. pinnacle which unirse we will take." he said. "flat we want lo keep Jennifer alive long enough so someone home territory. He talked to the will ratio up with something ir.oro reliable 1 The hospital is doing all il can In make sure Jennifer is not psychologically damaged by her isolation. She has been given stenlned stuffed animals anJ other toys with which to amuse herself.

A play therapist, who serves still-unsettled bankruptcy trou as her surrogate mother, plays bles. He says that because he wiih Jennifer every day. Some- iimes. thev hug each other. An appearance on a fedeial panics ar.il trying to keep one witness stand in relate now he jump al people mlei- laundercd cash for former Hal- limiire County Kverulive Dale Ar.dcrsiHl.

A courtroom admission lhat lie had committed just about every white-collar crime bin forgery. A Ihe fall, he moved lo Sara-iota, Fla and bepan a rceu lile doing what ho knows best, figuring luuv tu raise b-jsmess capital and finii tax shelters. his services are again available in llic Maryland List Sunday. Kline rap. a bru 1 ad in the financial section of the Washington Posl lo an- trice his av.iilahilitv in his s.iys ih.Tr's a less pri's-iire in telling others how iliur limoiHnes." he ex- when was sctlinfi up were just an ag- gr.i\..tiun." He s-ijs he li.is no idra when his bankruptcy situation will be fil "I think it will i.

ike a kn ul li" "I lol mniirv I il.ni I knnu hmv mud) Associated Press Tuesday about his r.ew career. Kline says he charges businesses $500 a month lor one ad pfobtam ia that I paid H8 for tour kllta and it'a baan we session. Etc said he has thraa ainca enact waa caahad. This stuff just kills her firm hi located In Irom whan to But they Juat vart. 1 clients across Ihe nation but declined to say how many.

The ad seeking customers in "rota tha company at' tha DacambaTTnd this area is linked lo Kline's received no wptj and no klha. Soon Jan. 5 1 called tha company and apoka with onaot thair rapraaanlatlvaa who told ma ha'd chack up on tha returns lo the area periodically on this siluation he is seeking clients to help make Ihe trips worthwhile. Jusl how does Joel Kline's Without this kiwi of stimulation. Satntbosan thinks Jenni- ler would regress mentally.

Depsite her strange environ- atlecl his present and hi ment. Jennifer looks like a normally developed ID-month-old. Slie pulls herself along in a walker, hoists herself up in her crib and smiles at the doctors a a up on a protetaing and aaa to it that I had tha kilt, in two waefca Wall, lf baan waaka mada wvaral mora phona and hava (ruatralad In my arlampta to gat my marchandlaa. I do nol want a rafund. I want my B.R.J., Qraaocaatta, clients md nurses whose faces are always shrouded in sterile surgical masks.

STYLES of GRANDFATHER CLOCKS OVER 75 ON DISPLAY in the financial consulting Thai's what we lold the company representative with whom business? we conferred about vour order. He explained lhat there are only Iwo kill companies on the east coast and he was having Irouble obtaining the merchandise himself, lie feels your besl bet is to get a refund from his company ar.d order Ihrough the other firm, which should have the kilts even though they may be more expensive. If he doesn't have it, he can't send it. he explained Incidentally, he told us that he never promised you your kills within two weeks. He cannot imagine where you got thai important the nancial in- 're getting Induing TIMIX cur THE CLOCK SHOPPE alChanj Una Dairy m.

(717) From Chambaraburg. ml Laft on m. at Farmart Marehantt mlk rtjnt Not gambling on the goodies I'm pfenning a mldwMar axcuralon to Ua Vagaa, ki a eoupto ol Can you Ml ma arhat I can airpaet lo aaa In ttia way o( L.V., Marttnaburg. w. Va.

Sure at the Rivtera. Don Rkkles and the Mills Brothers; at Caesars Palace. Steve Lawrence and Eydie Oorme: at The Frontier. Bobbi Gentrj- and UrrySlorchi at the Hilton. The Fifth Dimension and Myron Cohen; at UwMOM Grand.

Mac Davis and David Brenner; at The Sahara Totie Fields, and Robert Goulel and Nipsi Russell will be apncarinn al The Sands. Hjve fun. Court upholds recordation tax rates ANNAPOLIS tAl'i-ln a de- cisinn wliicli could save local governments millions of dol- l-irs. Judpe Matthew S. Kvans h.is uplield the rigiil ol Baltimore and five Man-land counties to set thcirown rcconlolinn rales Ev.ms ruled in Anne Arundvl County Ciicuit t'ouil Tuesday that UK rates rlurgcii by the sulxlivislons are valid even thi'y esi-erd limits sc; bi stale Ijiv.

Hl.s docisinn pliH Anne Aniivlel. diaries. Dorchester. M-wtfonii-ry. Mans Brillimore counties said the Ic-cal govern- menls were authoiized by tlie General Assembly in 19i8 to set their own r.ile.s.

The suit IIMS filed in Anne Arur.de] County Circuit Court l.isl year H.irry C. Blumen- an Annapolis lawver. Blumenthal rontended that since the rate lor Arundvl County sel by stale law al $1.10 for every $500 valuation. itie county couid not impose a recordalion tax of $3 50 per J500 on deeds for real and personal properly. F.vans ruled, however, thai il was Ihe clear intention of the legislature when it enacted the law lo permil llic subdivi- wns lo raise the tax rate above the amounts set forth in slate statutes.

The counties could have been forced lo refund $20 million or more lo taxpayers if Evans had ruled in BlumerHhars favor. In a similar case last year, the Court of Appeals held that the las rale applied Prince Georges County was invalid because it exceeded the amount scl in the state law. Judge Evans said, however, lha( Ihe Prince Georges rate was a special case because the legislature sel that rate after the passage of Ihe 1966 law giving local governments the power to fix rales. He also noted that the Prince Georges law said the rale established lor thai counly would apply notwithstanding any other provi- lions of the law. INVITATION TO BID fte of EfecMloi rf otniy.

US Kail Cfcireh Ftedrrkt. MaryLml 21701. Mtei blD6 i WFJ.L DftUJJNG PROGRAM Uirt tUMnwUT)- Srtool aad the xri Ran Court) Sriwl. train New Mflrkrt may bt lite Board of Kdura- iwd bWs vi bo received il IM Board of RdJcalioa Ofltto onlil: A.M. iECTt.

Krtnwry 23, 7W BoanJ of Kdjcaiwn rtw rigy 10 iay or ill proposal! and lo aay Liforaa I rt BY ORDKH OK THK BOARD OK FRK.RKRICK Lvoal OlttJKH MSI BRKNDA i. HOWE Versa VICTOR ROUE ir.d FARMKRS HOME ADMINISTRATION. So MW5 Equity II The Circuit Cnurt for ft'asfcingtai CooR- iy. ORDF-'llKII. By Ihe Clerk uf Cir- xll tho.

27th (Uy of Jiiwarj 19H. Ihe sales mate and reported by 3aviJ K. Jr. mi M. Kin- tinder, ippolnted fw I.VM'eo/lhcjEaleslate in prorwiirp Ibis rr.wlkxwd.

be ralilied and coifirir.ed. caaw be tare ihcjsih da of Kebraary 3 oi ihfi be in uled in wnie newspaper published in r.2:cnCw;r.:. al onto a wc-ok nr Ibrrt- succ-'ivo before IKe TV report jrrocrl fates 0 be J27 OUC CO TIIU: COPY-IK-ST Vaughn J. Baker, clerk Legal EM')TATIO TO bit) The B-vua fit pf 115 K.IM (lurch Sueel. II SKItVK'K KqrtPMKXr iMtia Kli'inr-nlary tlf Ji.v.k.

M.j-a.n.1 m.iy te it Board oi Kricca- UllKxv St.iK'i hill- received at the A ifSTi. Kc(r'jary K. A'. Tejn 1 nr and In 'if Bujfd cl Kdix-alion rf-a 1. CarrocJidn.

Jr. -S(x Public Notlea PUBLIC SALE O.trfcv: 12. 197b P.M. it-A. dry sinV.

nicl.l cdhmfis. rrat Cnntiril i- IwUP, fkt'lrjc icw pail! pals. rv. i- of Helm Owner Pubfe PLBI.IC SALE ATE: nr nitui MII UAY. MARCH i.

197(, A.M. the folloft-s: walr.ul (Vt. dry fcjgfi Icay. 4 pl.r«V-l»tnni ct.airs. corr.fr CL-p- droplral Lahlc.

carprt pic Lv-rg rocni i 10, 4-pfocp s-itc, Apiece waicrfall i I- i a (Jooti ITK- niiv-r c-k-nr nvrii lr JC lOT1 Jav ri Ir.in 111. vtis.1 oi MIU.MI. KXKC'UTOR ii srA OK TM Nll 19. 30. 2S.

3 2, J. 3 Public Safe PUBIICSAIE -I S7 12, 10:00 A.M..

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