.ancaster Farming, Saturday. October 13, 1973 L !4 —l Z ft!'- Barbara Myer and Scott Heisey were the the annual 4-H leaders banquet held at the teen leaders honored Thursday night at Farm and Home Center. - . v K \ w # II X' I * . * * • V I i ’i I ' v » s ? 4-H Service (Continued From Page 1) year of 4-H, is the leader of the rabbit club. The pig club leader, Scott Heisey, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. Warren Heisey, Elizabethtown RDI, also received a plaque. News reporter awards were also presented to three 4-H’ers by Dick Wanner, editor of Lancaster Fa-ming. The awards are presented jointly by Lancaster Farming and the Intelligencer Journal. Receiving awards for the best scrapbooks were Karen Mc- Carty, 14, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John McCarty, New Holland, and Ron Walton, 16- year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. John Walton Jr., Conestoga RDI. Karen is a member of the Garden Spot 4-H Club, while Ron is a member of the Penn Willow 4- H Club. The assistant reporter of the Garden Spot club, Laura Wun derly, was also honored. She is the 13-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter B. Wunderly, Blue Ball. Rounding out the annual program were the two 4-H talent winners, Sandy Arnold, who sang a solo, and Phyllis Kreamer, who played the cornet. “Everyone’s a consumer,” Says Jane Alexander Jane Alexander, the York County attorney who is Penn sylvania’s deputy secretary of agriculture, talked to the leaders about her job and her department at the conclusion of the awards ceremonies. She started by saying that the Pennsylvania Department of Agriculture is the largest state ag department in the nation, and it serves the country’s largest rural population. The imposing title of her often entertaining speech was “Consumer Attitude and Con sumer Responsibilities in Today’s Fluctuating Conditions”. “Candy and milk,” Mrs. Alexander said, ’’are the two most emotional food products on the market. The milk industry does a good job of getting a wholesome product to the con sumer, and most of the consumer complaints we get are the result of mishandling in the home. One of our agents investigated a complaint from a lady who called Continued on Page 25)