17512 Columbia

Archive for June 17th, 2012|Daily archive page

today’s news … Sunday, June 17

In Uncategorized on June 17, 2012 at 6:00 am

today’s news and information gleanings from here and there! 

Quote for today“What is so rare as a day in June … ” – James Russell Lowell [Click here to read the entire poem.]

  • Today is Father’s Day … Make time to let your Dad know you love him.
  • “Police were investigating the apparent murder of two people at 224 Lemon Lane, Leola, Saturday and seeking information about a man believed to have been an occupant of the house.” – Lancaster Sunday News
  • A home in Columbia for only $500! “DEEDS RECORDED: H. Joseph Younger and Christine E. Younger conveyed 441 Union St. to Jeffery J. Seibert for $500.” – Lancaster Sunday News
  • Alysa Poindexter, Columbia, B.A., English-professional writing, was graduated from Elizabethtown College.” – Lancaster Sunday News

Blue Postal Service collection boxes still stand on North Duke Street in downtown Lancaster. (Blaine T. Shahan/Sunday News)
[NOTE: This photo has been altered for this post by Columbia news, views & reviews.]

  • “Stephen Runkle will present a lecture on the “Gettysburg Campaign to the Susquehanna River” at 7 p.m. Friday, June 29, at the National Watch and Clock Museum, Columbia. The lecture is co-hosted by Rivertownes PA USA and the Susquehanna Gateway Heritage Area. Tickets are $18. Advance registration is requested; call 252-0229, ext. 4.” – Lancaster Sunday News

Columbian with his “dog is on the right track.”

In Everyday Living, In Columbia, People on June 17, 2012 at 5:05 am

State legislature considers measure to allow the use of dogs to track wounded deer. Kevin Lutz, of Columbia, and his wire-haired dachshund, Archie, are already an experienced team.

P.J. Reilly/Sunday News Kevin Lutz, of Columbia, works with his blood-tracking, wire-haired dachshund named Archie von Tierspur.

“State legislature considers measure to allow the use of dogs to track wounded deer. Kevin Lutz, of Columbia, and his wire-haired dachshund, Archie, are already an experienced team.

“Hunters’ wives are a special lot.

“Though they might be squeamish about such things at first, they grow accustomed to finding “special presents” in their garages, yards and freezers.

“‘I saw there’s a whole duck in there,’ my wife said matter-of-factly last season after she returned from the grocery store and had to stuff frozen vegetables in our kitchen freezer around a canvasback I had shot.

“Ever since Columbia resident Kevin Lutz dove into the world of deer-tracking dogs two years ago, his wife, Debra, has learned to share the family’s freezer space with some odd training tools.

“‘Yeah, my wife is real happy with me,’ Lutz said. ‘In the freezer in the basement I have quite the assortment of deer feet, livers and containers of blood.’

“In 2010, Lutz found himself yearning for a new challenge.

“Along with his wife, the then-55-year-old electrician at Three Mile Island had raised two kids, who were now grown up and out of the house.

“So he suddenly had some extra time on his hands that he hadn’t had in three decades.

“Lutz had always been — and continues to be — an avid hunter, who loves the outdoors.

“He thought he’d like to take on something new in that arena.

“But what?

“One day, he read an article in Bowhunter magazine about blood-tracking dogs trained to find wounded deer.

“‘That tweaked my interest, because I’m a Read the rest of this entry »

Sunday News article: “5 years of home sales show big skid in value”

In Everyday Living, Lists on June 17, 2012 at 4:29 am

Home value changes by school district (Todd B. Spidle/Sunday News)

“Remember the mid-2000s in the local real estate market?

“Those were the days, my friend, we thought they’d never end.

“But they did, and the home prices that had gone up during that boom era inevitably came down.

“An analysis by the Sunday News of houses sold for $125,000 and up in each of the county’s 16 school districts finds that prices declined in 15 of those districts from 2005-06 to 2010-11 — with the exception of Elizabethtown Area, where values rose 4.5 percent.

“Five — Solanco, Penn Manor, Ephrata, Conestoga Valley and Hempfield — experienced double-digit drops, ranging from 18.7 percent to 11.7 percent.”But there’s good news: The slippage in average sale prices isn’t nearly as bad as in many parts of the country, and local appraisers say houses here have started to appreciate after hitting bottom.”The Sunday News compared the 12-month periods from Oct. 1, 2005-Sept. 30, 2006, to Oct. 1, 2010-Sept. 30, 2011.

“Frank A. Christoffel III, executive vice president of the Lancaster County Association of Realtors, said LCAR statistics show about a 6.7 percent overall drop in county home values from 2006-2011, which seems on a par with the school district numbers.

“That’s ‘enough to make me comfortable,’ considering what other regions of the country are experiencing, he said.

“The 6.7 percent figure “speaks to the resilience and conservative nature of the county,” Christoffel said.

“While there was plenty of excitement in the local market during the early to mid-2000s, with bidding wars occasionally breaking out on properties for sale, ‘we’re not as crazy as some places’ when it comes to home price fluctuations, he said.” Click here to continue reading this Lancaster Sunday News article.

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