1 w pe Al WEDNESDAY, APRIL 7, 1971 p LLL Hr RRO SHR MARY SIPLING Mrs. Mary K. Sipling, 72, wife of Raymond Sipling, of Harrisburg Pike, Rheems, died Thursday, April 1, at 1:05 am. at the Whitehall Convalescent Center. She had been in failing health for sev- eral years, Born in Conoy Twp. a daughter of the late Cyrus and Anna McCurdy Keefer, she was a member of Bain- bridge Church of God, the Ladies Bible class of the Sun- day school, and the Rheems Fire ‘Company Auxiliary. In addition to her widower she is survived by four child- ren, Jane, wife of Ralph E. Smith, Columbia; James L. Kell, York; William C. Kell, Etters, and Marie M., wife of Roy Keller, Hershey R1: six step-children, Dorothy, wife of Earl Shoemaker and Marie, wife of Raymond Dietrick, both of Elizabethtown; Harry C. Sipling, Mount Joy; , Verna, wife of Kleeman Brosey, of Bainbridge; Howard S. Sip- ling and Ray _C. Sipling, both of Marietta R1; 21 grandchil- dren, and 11 great grandchil- dren. . Services were held on Mon- day afternoon from the M. Hawthorne Miller funeral home, Bainbridge, and burial was made in the Bainbridge cemetery, JOYCE H. HOLLINGER Mrs. Joyce H. Hollinger, 53, wife of C. A. S. Hollinger, of Bainbridge, died Thursday, April 1, at 2:45 a.m. in Saint Joseph’s hospital after a brief illness. She had been a kindergart- en teacher in the Bainbridge School for the past 14 years. She also had taught in Conoy Twp. and at the Crippled Children’s hospital, Elizabeth- town. Born in Bainbridge, where she resided most of her life, a daughter of the late Walter G. and Irene Brinser Haw- thorne, she also had lived in Champaign, Ill. She and her family traveled extensively and toured most of the Unit- ed States, part of Canada and e Deaths THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Western Europe, A graduate of the former Bainbridge high school and Elizabethtown high school, she attended Millersville State college and in 1962 was grad- uated with a B.S. degree in elementary education from Elizabethtown college, where she was a member of the Al- umni Association, he was a member of the Bainbridge United Methodist church; the WSCS of the church; American Association of University Women, Lancas- ter Branch; Elizabethtown Area, Pa. State and National Education Associations; PTA of the Bainbridge School; Wo- men’s Auxiliary to the Bain- bridge Fire Co.; Women’s Re- publican Club of Lancaster; Donegal Chapter 422, OES, and a charter member of the Women’s Auxiliary to the American Cancer Society. In addition to her husband, a teacher in the Donegal School District, she is sur- vived by two daughters, Pa- tricia J., wife of John (L. Longenecker, New Hudson, Mich., and Margaret A., a ju- nior at Albright college, and one grandchild, Services were held from the Miller funeral home in Elizabethtown Sunday, April 4, and burial was made in the Bainbridge cemetery. Unit is Honered In Canal Zone Major Wayne L. Warner, son of Mrs. Myrtle Warner, 101 E. High St., Maytown, is a member of the 24th Special Operations Wing in the Canal Zone that has been honored for its humanitarian aid to thousands of survivors of the devastating May 1970 earth- quake in Peru. Major Warner's unit, which operates from Albrook and ‘Howard Air Force Bases, has received the Air Force Out- standing Unit Award. A com- ponent of the U, S. 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Mr. and Mrs, Melvin Weav- er called on Miss Grace Hen- derson last Wednesday night. Mr. and Mrs, George Mor- ris returned from Florida last Tuesday. They enjoyed three weeks vacationing in Florida. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Fryber- ger, Baltimore called on Mrs. Joyce Lowy last Thursday. Alice Musser is a patient at St. Joseph’s hospital. She underwent an appendectomy last Thursday. Mrs, Charles Flowers is convalescing at her home, Mrs, Joseph Keener was taken by ambulance to the General hospital last Monday. She is in Intensive Care: Ray Fryberger is improving daily. Charles Hicks, a patient in the Polyclinic hospital, Har- risburg is slowly improving. Ben Boltz, Jr., a patient in the Harrisburg hospital is in Intensive Care and has not shown any improvement, The Fire Company answer- ed three fire calls, two assists and two ambulance calls last disaster relief operation. Supported by 24th ground personnel and staging out of Lima, wing C-123 Provider aircrews overcame numerous difficulties that included fly- ing over uncharted and some of the world’s most rugged terrain to help airdrop vital supplies to the survivors and evacuate the -injured. More than 50,000 persons were kil- led and some 200,000 were missing or injured during the disaster in the hard.hit Haui- las Valley and the central quake area about 250 miles north of the Peruvian capital city. Major Warner, who holds the aeronautical rating of sen- ior pilot, serves as a flying safety officer at Howard. He will wear a distinctive-service ribbon to mark his affiliation with the 24th, The major was commission- ed in 1955 through the avia- tion cadet program and has completed a year of duty in Vietnam, He is a 1952 graduate of E. Donegal Twp. high school. His wife Aline, is the daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, Dougal G. Sadler, Rt. 1, West End. N.C. For Drug Help “Contact,” the place to go to get help for a drug prob- lem, will keep its doors open longer, starting this week, In addition to the regular 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. weekday sched- ule, “Contact” will stay open until 9 p. m. Mondays, and Saturday mornings ’til noon. Group therapy meetings are held every Tuesday and Thursday evening, starting at 7 p.m, “Contact” is located at 26 S. Duke street, Lancaster. Phone 393-1715 is answered round the clock for emergen- cies, YOU CAN GET RELIEF FROM HEADACHE PAIN STANBACK gives you FAST relief from pains of headache, neurdigia, neuritis, and minor pains of arthritis, rheumatism. Because STANBACK contains several medically-approved and prescribed ingredients for fast relief, you can take STANBACK with confidence. Satisfaction guaranteed! Test Swap Bock STANBACK rp against any 0) erceararer ILL used er, a, Santis - Tr an atsina 10 a week. Fred Wetzel passed away last Tuesday evening and in- ternment was in the Union cemetery. Fred was a resident of Maytown the greater part of his life, We extend our sympathy to Mrs. Wetzel and son. The American Legion Aux- iliary will ‘hold the annual Americanism meeting at the Legion Home Monday, April 19 at 8 p.m. This meeting is open to the public. Easter Dawn Service at the Brethren in Christ church on Sunday at 6:30 a. m. Pastor Daihl will be the guest minis- ter, This is a Community ser- vice. Good Friday Services at St. John’s Lutheran church Fri- day at 12 noon and the Unit- ed Church of Christ at 7:30 p. m, The church fellowship sup- per will be held April 24 at 6:30 p.m. at the Church of God. % Washington (From page 2) - new served by the Depart. ments of the Executive branch would continue to have a strong voice in national poli- cy making, Broad goals defined by func- tion are fine for organization- al purposes, but there must continue to be a special place in policy making for tradit- ional economic sectors like agriculture, business and la- bor. We must also question whether or not the new super - departments will tend to in- sulate the President from im- portant decisions by placing new power in the hands of Cabinet secretaries. While there is a need for part of the bureaucratic burden to be lif- ted from the President’s sho- ulders, there must also be as- surances that on important is- sues the buck will stop at the White House and not in some Department. Once the question have been raised, then reorganiza- tion must become a reality. It is the only way to stop the spread of increasing public frustration and dillusionment with government. ww Other Editors HOMETOWN NEWSPAPER READERS The hometown newspaper reader makes more money, is ‘better educated, and buys more goods than the average members of the audience for television, radio and general circulation magazines. Who reads hometown news- papers? This was the question asked of a large media study firm, Daniel Starch & Staff, Inc. of New York City. Starch found out. - Community newspapers were included in the area probability sample of all U.S. households which is the basis for the Starch Annual Media Study of Primary Audiences. The survey also found the community newspaper reader is more attentive, and has a higher loyalty to his home town newspaper than does any member of any cther gen- eral media audience. The report found the com. munity newspaper reader’s in- come to be some $1,400 annu- ally over the mnational aver- age. Over 40 percent of the readers have income in excess of $10,000 annually. The me- dian income of the average reader of hometown newspa- pers is $8,952 as compared with the median income of $7,589 for the nation. It was revealed 37.9 per- cent of heads of households in the community newspaper market are white collar work- ers, as compared with 32.4 percent, the national average. In that 55% it is projected more government officials sub- scribe and read community newspapers than any other PAGE THREE media: school officials, county officials, city, state and fed- eral persons of authority. Over 62 percent of all per- sons reading hometown news- papers are within a household with three or more persons, Over 37 percent are eone:-to- two-person households. A startling 78 percent of all hometown readers own their own homes, with 86 percent of these in single family dwellings. Only 7.8 percent live in apartment or other types of dwellings. 34.8 per- sons have lived in their own homes for more than 10 yrs. A total of 88.1 percent of the households in the commu- nity newspaper market own one or more automobiles, as compared with 79.9 percent for the national rate. Two or more cars are own- ed by 36.5 percent, again a- head of the nation as a whole. The study showed that 67 per- cent of households in areas of 10,000 or less population bought new cars with 49.6 percent of all automotive dealers located in towns of 10,000 or less pepulation. These people account for 33.1 percent of all automotive sales or $15 billion. The weekly grocery bill shows the size of family units previously listed. A whopping 59.4 percent of these home- town newspaper readers spend between $24.99 and $34.99 a week for groceries. The over $35 to over $45 gro- cer bill that small hometown- ers spend shows a percentage of the overall group to be 26.- 6 percent. Annually these readers, 32.- 4 percent of them, buy a ma- jor appliance and 545 per- cent buy more than onesmall appliance every year. More than 65 percent own autom- atic washers and 44.4 percent own dryers. The national average for college graduates is 24.6 per- cent of the U. S. population. The average for this group of readers of community -news- papers is 28.2 percent, almost 4 percent more than the owver- all national percentile. —PNPA PRESS FORMULA FOR CATASTROPHE Much is going to be ‘heard in coming months of propos als now before Congress to impose a national ‘health in- surance system upon the country. Such a system, -aecor- ding to authoritative esti- mates, would cost in +the neighborhood of $77 billion a year—about $1,000 for each household in the land. A tax burden of this magnitude would go a long way toward destroying what remains of the economic independence of the people. Before taking this final plunge toward a welfare state, long and careful study should be given to alternative pro- posals for improving the ex- isting pluralistic health care system. Mr. Elliot L. Richard- son, secretary of Health, Edu- cation, and Welfare, is one of those who has reservations with respect to wide-ranging national health insurance pro- posals. He says, “I think we can identify the deficiencies of our overall health system quite clearly and then address these by measures that are aimed directly at overcoming them using the leverage of the very considerable pro- grams the federal government already supports. The prob- lems of inadequate . . . man- power . . . lack of facilities in many places . . . inability to pay . . . but these are prob- lems that I think and should be addressed by specially tar- geted federal initiatives ‘be- fore we reach the conclusion that the only way of dealing with these is by a total na- tional health insurance sys- tem.” Health care proposals such as national health insurance that would ultimately end by turning the nation’s doctors into servants of the state -and patients into mere numbers on a government ledger would quite probably lead to a catastrophic combination of rising costs and declining standards of care. SR a NE ial RGF RF aan Cr op ol rl por a ho Rg TR _ 2 a TT fit Ee te Bh agp
Significant historical Pennsylvania newspapers