WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1971 ALBERT E. ZINK, SR Albert E. Zink, 60, of Greensburg R3, formerly of Marietta, died at 3 am Sat- urday morning, Feb. 6, at his home, Death was unexpected, He was the husband of Paul- ine Baker Zink, Born in Coatesville, he was the son of the late Harry Zink and Flossie Stone Zink, of Marietta, He resided in the Marietta area most -of his life and moved to Greensburg in 1954. He was employed by the Texas Eastern Transmission Corp. as a compressor station operator at the Delmont, Pa,, station, In addition to his wife and mother he is survived by sev- en children, Albert Jr., of Laughman, Fla.; Janet, wife of David Warner, Marietta: Norma, wife of Robert Yarn- ell, Marietta; George, Colum- bia; Betty, wife of John F. Lighty, Marietta; Richard, of Conestoga View; Robert, of Marietta; 22 grandchildren; and two greatgrandchildren, Services were held from the Smedley funeal home on Tuesday at 2 p.m. and burial was made in the Marietta cemetery. = The Cub Scouts are holding a Food Sale Saturday a.m. at at Leonard Musser’s Store room on East High street. Mrs. John Trout observed her 91st birthday anniversary Feb. 1. Mrs. Harold Derr celebrat- ed her birthday anniversary Feb. 6. Debbie Hay will celebrate her birthday anniversary on February 12. 12. Jennings Arnold celebrated his birthday anniversary on Feb. 9, Mr. and Mrs. James Dro- han celebrated their wedding anniversary Feb. 9. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Waller entertained the Wilmer Dicks MAYTOWN NEWS NOTES of Millersville last Sunday in honor of their 19th wedding anniversary. Guests were the immediate families. Mr. and Mrs. Adam Greer returned last Monday after vacationing in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Dem- ming, Glenside, spent last weekend with Mrs. Hazel Crankshaw. Mrs. David Doehlert, New- ark, Del., spent last Sunday with Miss Marie Harter, Mrs. Violet Downing, of Columbia, visited Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Mayers last week- end, Miss Alice Buller a former resident of town died at the Allegheny Lutheran Home, Hollidaysburg last week. She BUSINESS DIRECTORY Convenient Reference To Firms Serving Community orn = bn ® DAIRY PRODUCTS ELWOOD MARTIN PENSUPREME PRODUCTS MILK & ICE CREAM R.D.2, Ph. Mt. Joy 653-4891 ® EXCAVATING C. ROBERT FRY GENERAL EXCAVATING ® Residential @ Industrial R.D.2, MANHEIM, PA. Phone Mount Joy 653-1253 ® FURNITURE Eberly Furniture & Floor Covering ELIZABETHTOWN R.D.3 1% Mi. East along Manheun Road Call 367-5468 e¢ HOME IMPROVEMENT ROOFING SIDING SPOUTING — AWNINGS RALPH F. KLINE Over 20 yrs. experience Mount Joy 6563-8771 Lititz 626-7474 Ephrata 733-1224 We're particular about our work Ss ® LOANS i, Instalment Loan Service Inc. (LOANS TO $600) Instalment Consumer Discount Co. (LOANS TO $3500) 23 Cent. Sqr., Elizabethtown PHONE 367-1185 ®¢ MASONRY LESTER P. ESHELMAN MASONRY Brick - Block - Stone Silicone Masonry Waterproofing Donegal Springs Road 653-5325 mam OIL SERVICE | 1 @® HOLLINGER OIL SERVICE MOUNT JOY ATLANTIC PETROLEUM PRODUCTS Oil Burner Sales & Service 653-4484 ® PAINT & BODY WORK Carriger Paint 8& Body Shop Cars painted. Wrecks rebuilt Wheel Alignment Service RHEEMS 367-6450 ® PLUMBING H. S. MECKLEY & SON PLUMBING - HEATING OIL BURNERS Sales & Service 15 W. Main St. Ph. 653-5981 LEO KOB, INC. Heating — Plumbing Air Conditioning “Since 190%” 24 South Market Etreet Elizabethtown. Pa. A dampened paper napkin will pick up all those tiny slivers of a broken glass—and protect children’s bare feet. THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, taught for 37 years in Juniata county. She was 86 years old. Interment was in the May- town Union Cemetery, Your correspondent and friend called on the Fred Wetzels, Marietta last Satur- day. Fred is convalescing from a recent coronary. The Illuminator Class of the Church of God will meet on Thursday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Arnold. Feb. 14, pastor Gary Bend- er, of Pittsburgh will be the guest speaker at the Church of God at 10:30 a.m. February 24 — Ash Wed- nesday, there will be Table Communion at St. John's Ev- angelical church, On the same date at 7:30 there will be Preparatory Service in the United Church of Christ. Feb. 28th will be Communion Sunday. LETTER To The Editor Dear Editor: I am a concerned citizen who is asking a question of the Donegal School District administration. Why is our school system one of the three county districts that is rejecting Lockheed’s “Drug Decision” course? I am af the opinion that EDUCATION, per se, is one of the few means we have to overcome many of our social ills and/or evils. In other words, I be- lieve in education! Doesn't our school district believe in the power of education? Or— don’t they believe that the drug problem is a problem severe enough to warrant grave concern, and, hence, drastic measures? From what I have read, the Lockheed Drug course is thorough, challenging, inter- esting,- and most importtant, geared to the very young stu- dent. In gearing to this age student, Lockheed is practic- ing the “ounce of prevention” or ‘lock the door before the horse is stolen” philosophy. Just recently I read an ac- count of a ten-year old young- ster who turned in his pot- smoking babysitter. How did the child have knowledge to do so? He had been exposed to a drug-abuse program at his public school! Let's not be so provincial in our attitudes. By refusing to take any action, we so much as pretend the problem does not exist. The figures show an extremely high rate of increase in drug abuse right here in our own ‘quaint, lovely’ Lancaster County! I am of the opinion that educa- tors should be so convinced of the power of “Education” that they believe mountains can (and sometimes MUST) be moved! Sincerely, Concerned Citizen ® Others are Saying (From page 2) War, and the boys were from the streets of England’s cities —and from the most exclus- ive schools. Two years later, Boy Scouting came to the United States when Mr, Wm. D. Boyce, a Chicago newspa- per and magazine publisher, inspired by his acquaintance- ship with Scouting in Eng- land, incorporated on Feb. 8, 1910, the Boy Scouts of Am- erica in Washington, D.C. A Federal Charter from Cong- ress was granted on June 15, 1916. Today we owe a debt of gratitude to the vison of Lord Baden-Powell and Mr, William D. Boyce. There is no better way of expressing that gratitude than by furth- ering the cause of the Scouts at every opportunity during the month of February. DRAWBACK TO PANIC Everyone has read of the The man who seeks your advice too often is probably looking for praise rather than information. PA. disasters that occur when a mob panics. Cries of alarm on a sinking ship or a crowd- ed dance floor are invitations to tragedy. Something of a similar na- ture takes place in these days of instant communication when the country is flooded with news stories that start millions of people rushing for the nearest “exit”. Something of this nature may be happen- ing in the case of the chemi- cal aid to agriculture known as pesticides. Thanks to emotional report- ing, the pressure is on to “ban pesticides” with little thought given to the possib’y disstrous consequences. Some of those consequences have been touched upon in a short feature on pesticides in the house organ of a major drug company. The article draws attention to the fact that resi- dents in areas of New York and Connecticut have experi- enced their second ‘leafless summer” It says, “The region is returning to the ‘balance of nature’ that many anti-pes- ticide advocates have wanted, or so they think.” Until 1968, the pests had been kept in control by spraying with DD- T. An ineffective substitute has ‘led to the leafless sum- mers for this region. As the articles goes on to point out, “The leafless trees in New York and Connecticut may be an indiction of what the future would be like if pesti- cides were banned: insect- riddled crops; crop-choking weeds growing in abundance; rampant diseases, such as ma- laria and encephalitis; sky- rocketing food prices; unsani- tary living conditions and food storage; and city dwel- lers farming small plotsinan attempt to raise their own food because farmers could not do the entire job.” The point of the article in the® drug firm’s house organ is that pesticides should be used properly—not bandoned And every effort is being made by the pesticide jndus- try, the goverment and other interested parties to further public education on the safe application of the vital chem- icals that play such a large part in keeping this nation healthy and well fed. These eductional efforts should not be drowned out by panic-in- spiring, anti-pesticide head- lines. % Washington (From page 2) the difference in a new dedi- cation to public service. If power can be made to flow from Washington back to the people rather than from the people to Washington, there will be a renewed faith in the worth of individual par- ticipation in socjal decision- making. PAGE THREE Second, the revolution is one of priorities,. By stressing goals which speak to the vil y real concerns of the Ameri- can people, a new trust can be developed in the ability of government to bridge the gap between promise and per- formance. For example, an innovative idea like revenue is a big national goal which seeks to meet some problems facing many individual citiz- ens. It recognizes the plight of the taxpayer, who is.over- burdened with constantly in- creasing state and local de- mands on his pocketbook, and proposes to help him by giving state and local govern- ments a portion of Federal funds. Another example of this revolution in priorities is the emphasis placed on human needs. The new budget adds another chapter to the trend toward using a smaller per- centage of overall spending for defense and more of the money for human resources. Of course, defense cannot be trimmed beyond a level which guarantees national security, but we can still place emphasis on non-de- fense matters. And the proof that there is a trend in that direction, a revolution if you will, is in the record of the past two years. The third and perhaps most important facet of the revolu- tion is an effort to rekindle the American spirit. We have witnessed during the last three decades a slow erosion of our personal freedom and a gradual loss of human dig- nity. We become so involved with the collective needs of the country that we overlook- ed the true basis of the Am- erican system, individual need. We traded personal lib- erty away for the security of a big government. And we miss what we lost. The program offered to the Nation by the President has as its foundation a belief in the individual. It seeks to regain national momentum by harnessing individual energy It is an attempt to find a way to make government work for all of us without dom\n- ating any one of us. It would hope to establish new respect for the qualities of initiative, personal sacrifice and readi- ness to seize opportunity. So, there is a revolutionary emphasis in the President's Six Great Goals. Now it is up to Congress to decide wheth- er the Nation will take a re actionary or a revolutionary road into the future, The original cost of the Statue of Liberty was #@ébout one million dollars and today it costs in the neighborhood of $1,000,000 annually to keep her going. The office wolf belongs in accounting: He has a good head for figures. NOTICE TO RESIDENTS OF LANCASTER COUNTY, PA. RETURNS OF PERSONAL PROPERTY For the Calendar Year Ending December 31, 1970 Subject to Taxation For County Purposes At the Rate of Four Mills on the Dollar PAYABLE DURING THE YEAR 1971 UNDER the Provisions of the Act of June 17, 1813 and The Supplement and Amendments Thereto. Every resident, poration in the City and County of sonal property taxable under the Act individual, copartnership, company or cor- Lancaster holding per- of June 17, 1913, P.L. 507 and amendments is required by law to file a return thereof to the Lancaster County Personal Property Tax Bureau, stating the market value thereof as of December 31, 1970. Returns to be made between January 2, 1971 and Feb- rurary 15, 1971. Blank forms for Returns have been mailed, and if you did not receive a blank return, one may be ob- tained, at the office of the Lancaster County Personal Prop- erty Tax Bureau, 36 N. Duke St., Lancaster, Pa. PENALTY: FAILURE TO FILE RETURN ON OR BEFORE FEBRUARY 15, 1971, THE PERSONAL PROPERTY TAX BUREAU WILL ENTER AGAINST YOU AN ESTIMATED ASSESSMENT, TO WHICH WILL BE ADDED A PENALTY OF 12%. Following is a partial list of personal property subject to tax; Mortgages, Promissory Notes or Bonds of individuals; Judgments; Public Loans or Bonds (not exempted); Bonds, etc. of Corporations of First Articles of Agreement, (which bear Class; shares of Stock, etc. interest) Mortgages; Judgment Notes or Promissory Notes between members of the family are taxable If there is any doubt as to the taxability of securities held, consult your lawyer, banker or broker. Assistance in pre- paring forms is available at the Lancaster County Personal Property Tax Bureau, Lancaster, Penna. LANCASTER COUNTY PERSONAL PROPERTY TAX BUREAU 36 North Duke Street, Lancaster, Pennsylvania 44-3c
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers