September 13, 1978 SUSQUEHANNA TIMES—Page 7 fo” > x|AP~9 |x Answers (to crossword puzzle of two weeks ago) Sill 1 8.8 6.686868 0808800808088 8.08 Wog ’s Festival 0 BE wa SN > = os [| To £10 m E + = ELE 7 [RIE|AH Wale eR DUCGING AKEASYS. w to those thrilling days of tick telephone rings again. white, black and in a special and blue. Beautifully styled, >asy to order. regular telephone and call one Business Office today. PHONE | VANIA [HITS hone System al N Hop 1 M E L M A R 1] I E ola NT. YT ‘A 1] olL 8 m i Amann ial TIE[E Family portrait: 4 generations A N AN} 6] A v a , D|[-|==]z[~ [> EO Four generations of the Seth J. father Seth J. Sentz; grandfather Robert E. Sentz, Sr.; and son Jeremy Sentz. ...water contamination [continued from front page] have been blamed on water containing more than 10 milligrams per litre of nitrate nitrogen. (Mount Joy averages 11 milligrams per litre). On the other hand, some infants can apparently drink larger quantities of nitrates with no ill effects. The nitrates come from fertilizer which farmers spread on their fields, and the problem is common in Lancaster County and other agricultural areas. Boiling water does not solve the problem; it makes it worse. Adults and children over six months of age are apparently unaffected by low levels of nitrate conta- mination. Nitrate in drinking water was first associated in 1945 with a temporary blood disorder in infants called methemoglobinemia. Since then, approximately 2000 cases of this disease have been reported from North Sentz family are pictured above: great-grand- father Robert E. Sentz, Jr.; America and Europe, and about 7 to 8 percent of the infants died. Many infants have drunk water when the nitrate nitrogen was great- er than 10 mg/l without developing the disease. Many public water supplies in the United States have levels of nitrate that rou- tinely exceed the standard, but only one case associ- ated with a public water supply has been reported. Bill Poco y spitter, winds " for a 17-foot spit. Bill came from Coudersport, PA, to defend his title against local spitters. Although two local men tied him at his previous rd of 18 feet, Bill kept his title. Here is Bill doing one of his earlier spits—at or 8 feet. The judge [squatting with the umbrella], must decide if the spit sizzles when it hits the hot stove. No Sizzle, no 0 point The Cogars relax with their bored and stroked chain saws, which can rip through a 9 inch square beam in about 3 seconds. Arden Cogar [pronounced like ‘“‘cougar’’], in the center, has been 17 times the world champion wood cutter with an axe. His $150 axe can cut through the same beam in 17 seconds. The Cogars, who all come from the same little town in West Virginia, scooped up most of the axe and saw wood cutting awards.