PAGE 2 THE YANCEY JOURNAL APRIL 4, 1974 The Burnsville Congrega tion of Jehovah's Witnesses announces a tree Bible lec ture every Sunday morning, 9*30 a. m. at their Kingdom Hall on old Burnsville H. y. (by WKYK) by a qualified Sird't 'D’lufySt&ie >*£ 32-2146 Burnsville, N.C. PHARMACY COMMENTS EALTH NEWS Your Rx Specialists: Charles Gillespie, Jr., Mike Eudv, and Ferril McCurry Are Politics Ruining Health Delivery? Public sentimen' often favors the posting of prescrip tion drug prices. Sounds good, but common sense opposes such action. Why? Because, literally thousands of drugs and their combinations must be recognized before price- . posting can be truly effec tive —an impractical propo- KzLsmimmSLr Consumer groups and am bitious politicians know it is unreasonable to post, change, and continuously up-date upwards of 20,000 drugs. \ et, to win increased favor with an uninformed constituency, such special interest types continue to press for prescrip tion price posting, despite its impracticably. Further more, their gesture to compromise the issue by posting only the “top” 100 drugs is no more than token action with strict political overtones troublesome to us, yet mis leading to an unsuspecting public! Each week we present the above comments for your information. We very much appreciate your reader ship and would be especially happy to have you ex press your views regarding the contents of this space. r / BAYER \ / ASPIRIN \ / TABLETS \ I 100 ' s 79$ Re& SU7 \ GERITOL TABLETS $0()9 40’s Reg. $3.09 L P® A 12 0. ” I'= “iS 1 Tablets 1 mm Both Products SI 49 Reg. $2.10 * Reg. $1.05 f l TIMED RELEASE II 79' POLLARD’S DRUG STORE minister of the Watchtower Bible G Tract Society. On April 7, Jehovah's Witnesses invite all to the celebration of the Lord's Evening Meal. • f* - ’ * Primary Care Clinic To Open April 8 The Yancey County Prima ry Care Clinic will open on Monday, April 8, on the ground floor of the Yancey County Hospital. The clinic will be open Mondays, Wednes days, Thursdays, and Fridays from 10?00 a. m. to 6:00 p. m. The clinic, a project and division of the Blue Ridge Hos pital System, will expand and intensify the health’ care ser vices of the Community. Open ing staff levels will in c 1 ude Fergus Pope, M.D.j Gale Tou ger, R.N. and Ncrma Duncaiy R.N. (Family Nurse Practition er trainees); and Marie Bledsoe; Patient Services Coordinator. The introduction of the Family Nurse Practitioner is a key element in the clinic's planning. Both Norma Dime an and Gale Touger are engaged in their preceptorship as Fami ly Nurse Practitioners, having couple ted the first six months of their training at the Univer sity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The "FNP" is a Regis - tered Nurse who has studied for a year in a special program which includes academic and clinical experience. The Uni versity of North Carolina at Chapel Hill program is design ed to enable the ','FNP" to function as a Primary Care Practitioner. 'Their practice is people oriented? the individ ual, the family, and the com munity. The Family Nuise Practitioners will do routine examinations and treat com mon ailments. Working as health team members with Dr. Pope, they will consult with /fmaffa/yain imaiar/ EFFERDENT TABLETS 96’s m 0 Reg. $2.39 NEW FORMULA MICRIN PLUS I MICRIN i| PLUS I 6 oz. cru . Reg. 85' J J him or refer the patient to him for more specialized treatment. They will also provide on-go - ing care and consultation not only to the individual but for the entire family. They hope to reac i out in the community to provide health maintenance and education. Gale Touger attended Bos ton University and Duke Uni - versity, graduating from the latter in 1972 with a BSN de gree. She is a member of Sig ma Theta Tau, the nursing honor society. Ms. Touger's prior professional experience includes employment in the intensive care nursery-’ at Watts Hospital in Durham and as a public health nurse in Johnston County, North Carolina. Mrs. Norma Duncan gradua ted in 1961 from Rowan Mem orial School of Nursing, Salis bury, North Carolina. She is a member of Santa Filomena, a nursing honor society. Mrs. Duncan's prior werk experience includes employ ement at Spruoe Pine Hospital; Killeen Clinic in Killeen, Texas; York Gen - eral Hospital in Rock Hill, South Carolina; and as an.E. S. E.A. School Health Nurse' in Mitchell County. She is mar ried to Charles P. Duncan of Spruce Pine and has two child ren, Brynne and Connie. Mrs. Marie Bledsoe gradua Sink Appoints New Assistant J. Ardell Sink, General Mgr. of Radio Station WKYK,Burns ville, N.C. and President of Mark Media, Inc., parent com pany of a group of radio stations in North and South Carolina with central offices located in Burnsville, N.C., announces the appointment of Don Herman as Special Assistant to the Pres ident. Don Herman comes to Burns ville from Bethesda, Md. where he held the position of Nation al Broadcast Sales Manager for 3 Although there are many investment opportunities available . times are a bit uncertain. f STOCKS 1 STOCKS STd KS STOCKS STd KS STOCKS STd kSSTOCKSSfI BANK SAVINGS BANK SAVINGa BANK SAVINGS! [certificates i OF DEPPSITj ted from Greensboro College in 1969 with a BA degree in So ciology. She was previously employed as a social worker by the Mecklenburg County De partment of Social Services. Since moving to the area she has served as a research assis - tant for Mountain Scenic Plan ning and Development Commis sion. She is married to Tom Bledsoe, Consumer Credit Mgr. with NCNB in Spruce Pine. Dr. Fergus Pope received a BA degree from Colgate Univer sity and MB and BS degrees from St. Bartholemew's Hospi - * tal Medical College at the Uni versity of London. He comple ted a pediatric residency at the Mayo Clinic. Dr. Pope's work has included a broad range of experiences in Community health, including Director of Community and Regional Ser vices at Appalachian State Uni versity and Consultant to the Government of Biafra for the Coordination of American Re lief to Children. As Director of Community and Regional Services, Dr. Pope was origin ator of the Primary Care Clinic and will be working as its only physician under the Appala - chian Regional Commission Grant. He and his wife, Ruth, have three children, Francis, David and Clara. an electronic manufacturing firm. Prior to his last position he was sales manager of a ra dio station in St. Louis, Mo.and he has also worked in broadcas ting in the Washington, D. C. area, in various capacities, with the Mutual Broadcasting System, and Radio Station WDL WWDC, WARL, as well as the Ifoice of America and Telenews Productions. Eton and his wife, Lue will make their home in Burnsville What are you going to do with your money this year? So Northwestern Bank savings and Certificates of Deposit that pay guaranteed interest look especially good. And our savings rates are the highest in history— the highest allowed by law. Save your money this year. THE NORTHWESTERN BANK Member FDIC 1974 j r BONDS ~1 DDSBONDS 1 MDSBONDS BO NDSBONDS BO UDSBONDSBd Idsbondsbj [nter^ [guaranteed r INTEREST I and «f SOUTHERN APPALACHIA with .Rogers Whiti-m-r **, t,-l MHir -l,„ • •>!.iwi, a.. Mofft-r- Hili.ir *■(», Ik" l '*' - V -K&b? “**7 Having just returned from tiie opening session of a two week forum on Appalachia at Mars Hill College, I feel great ly encouraged ever the burgeon ing interest all over our region in its past, Its present and its future. And the good thing about the movement is that it is not limited merely to the college and university leaders but is promoted by the community at large. At Mars Hill, for in stance, the forum included speakers and other participants representing such diverse areas as the college and university scene, the North Carolina De partment of Mineral Resources; local schools and churches, the mountain political arena, the Blue Ridge Parkway, the Com mission on Religion in Appala chia, law enforcement agercie% the North Carolina Department of Transportation and Highways land development interests and numerous private citizens. Such forums and other types of meetings are being held Poppy Poster Contest Set To help young people be mare aware of the meaning of the Poppy as a memorial flower for American War dead, the American Legion Auxiliary of Burnsville will have a Poppy Poster Contest. The Poppy Poster Contest is open to school children ages 6 to 10 and ages 11 to 17 years. The prizes.are equal in each age group. Three dollars first prize and $2 second prize. Each poster shall have a slo gan not to exceed ten words. The words American Legion Auxiliary should appear on the poster but not as part of the sdfsfs ESTATE I H ESTATE 1L estateJ IL ESTATa L j throughout Southern Appalachia They can bode only good for the region in my opinion, for they represent grass root inter - est in and support of measures to instill pride in the mountain past and faith in its future. Readers occasionally send clippings my way which seem appropriate for the column. Mrs. Frankie Brewer, of Raleigh, N. Carolina, recently enclosed an editorial comment from the News and Observer which is self- explanatory, for it relates to an item long familiar to Appalachian residents. "Television touts many po tations and potions for coughs and sore throats, but there is no mention of mullein syrup, a standard remedy in Eastern Ca rolina when many people had to doctor u. -ir own ailments. " Mullein, of a genus of herbs of the figwort family, grew wild around old fields,and because of its medicinal prow - ess, some folks permitted it in their vegetable gardens. The big leaves of the whitish-green slogan. The Poppy must have four red petals, center black and green, green stem and no leaves. Posters should be 14" by 20 "on poster paper. The person entering the contest should print his name, address, age, parents name and school an the back of the poster. All posters will be judged at the April 23rd American Le gion meeting. Posters can be left at the Town & Country Shoe Store before 5:00 p. m. April 23rd or given to a Legion mem ber to bring to the meeting. All posters will be displayed in local stores. plant were boiled down to a pulp. When the brew cooled, apple vinegar, sugar or honey and homemade brandy were added to the mullein water. If scuppemong brandy was added and if the syrup was taken sever al times a day, a cure was axio matic. And mullein water was used for sore joints, but without the addition of brandy. "Lovers of the fiction of the late Bernice Kelly Harris will recall that Tiny Ardley, in 'Sage Quarter,' went to the mullein border and picked a bunch 'for a slow kind of ach - ing she could not put her hand on. ' But if mullein didn't work for 'love sickness,' Tar Heels used to bet on its general curative properties, especially when it was laced copiously with scuppernong brandy. " Another reader and I need help. Mrs. H. R. Eggers, of Boone, N.C., recalls a portion of a game called Chicamoco - moco. It starts thus: Chicamocomoco I went to the well To wash my big toe. When I got back One of my black chick ens was gone. What time is it, old witch? Drop me a line if you know the game and how it is played. To Attend Os Workshop Harold Bennett of Burnsville will be attending an occupa - tional education planning work shop on Thursday, April 4, at tiie Regional Education Center in Canton from 10 a. m. until 4p. m. A. G. Bullard, Asso ciate Director of Occupational Education for the State educa tion agency, is conducting the workshop. Planning for Occupational Education programs on the lo cal level is necessary to elimi nate duplication of effort and expense, says Bullard. By coordinating all occupational education programs, we can make sure there is not a surplus of trained workers in some oc cupations and not enough in others. MAY Tech Seminar On Tuesday, April 9, 1974, Mayland Technical Institute will co-sponsor along with Ap palachian State University and Caldwell Community College, a one-day seminar at the Beech Tree Inn on Beech Mountain. The clinic is designed to bene fit desk clerks, housekeepers, waitresses, sales personnel and service employees. It will be conducted by Mr. John Baxter from the University ofKaitucky. There will be a SIO.OO re gistration fee which will cover tuition, booklet, luncheon and attendance certificate. Regis tration will be from 8:00 until 9:15 a.m. on April 9, 1974.^ THE YANCEY JOURNAL Box 6ST Burnsville, N.C. 28714 Ed Yuziuk—Publisher Carolyn Yuziuk- Editor Patsy Randolph Manager 1 Fubltuhrd Every Thurr.day Dy Twin Cities Publishing Co. 2nd Class Postage Paid At Burnsville, N.C. Thursday, April 4,1974 Number 14 Subscription Rates By Mail: In Yancey County One Year ..04.1C Six Months *3.12 Out of County or State °"® Year $6.00 Six Months *5.00