2—The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa.. Thursday, June 4, 1953 THE BULLETIN | Published every Thursday at 11 East Main Street, Mount Joy, Lancaster County, Pa. William N. Young, Publisher ———— | John E. Schroll, Editor and Publisher 1901 - 1952 $2:00 Per Year by Mail. upon request Subscription Rate Advertising Entered at the postoflice at Mount Joy, Pa.. as second-class mail under the Act of March 3, 1879. Member, Pennsylvania Newspaper Publishers’ Association rates Editorially . . . Delaying The Plowing Floods and hurricanes still are in the news singing what our weather-predicting felling the fellows bgck at Heners, that and despite friend, Sam Miller claims, we still are con- '¢ | OWL BY A WISE You Know. I heard of a lot of tales in my time. Bu! this is the first time I ever heard of mice, — — — — Harry Brown was he has mouse in one of his cubboard draws that vinced that all of this rain is due to the atomic | can sing — — — — The fellows seemed some- blasts out in Yucca Flats. | what skeptical until Henry Engle told them The weather is so mixed up, in fact, that | e had mice thal done the same thing. the official government weather forecasters seem to have lost all grip on the subject. For example, last Friday night we turned on our TV set to hear Clint Ewell tell us that Memorial Day would be clear and balmy over practically the whole nation. And you don't have to be told what brand of weather we really received! And if we are right, that old sayin Mary Twain's that we talk a lot about the weather but never do anything about it, is going to be tossed out the window. those atomic blasts are causing all of this rain. the farmers, hereabouts at least, are going to insist they call the whole thing off —_until they get the plowing done, at least! In the meantime, Sam Miller continues to insist that all this rain is just the result of a couple of planets getting into juxtaposition with one another. Hmmm! * * * We're Confused! One job we certainly would not have wanted to perform over the past week-end was to deliver a Memorial Day address. No, we weren't asked, but had we been we most assuredly would not have been too impres- sive, we're just a bit too confused. Imagine, if you will, what you would or could have said in honor of those brave men and women who have given their lives in the past two wars. Surely they fought and died for democracy, for this the greatest of all nations. Sure, but were those sacrifices necessary? Or were they the result of bung- ling by international theorists? Today we're confused over what Uncle Sam is doing in the name of preserving dem- ocracy and a free world. Senator Taft talks about going it alone without the U.N. But if you read the casualty estimates from the most recent Korean push you realize that we're already going it alone, for we lost thousands as compared with a few hundred of all other nations! We are fighting in Korea as a result of a crazy treaty in which the country was di- vided up. For that matter, why must we have such a serious concern over Korea? | Germany was divided up by & bunch of dip- lomats who must have been suffering from | some mental ailment. We’ll go out on Main | Street today, pick twenty guys at random | who can come up with better decisions then those. Vet decisions like those may be the cause | you in that line. Can | | | | | g of | ladies picked him up and brought “Pappy” For if |iob! x % 5 If you don't see “Pappy” Enck around for awhile, you'll know his legs played out - - - - Last Thursday a couple of buddies, look him to Marietta, and somehow or other Pappy got away from his buddies and had to walk home a or at least half way. A qouple of young to town. Frank Shreve said he thinks it was a put up * * * The other day a small boy and his mother | were coming out of Detwiler’s Barber Shop when the lad looking up town said: “Look | mommy, here's comes a cowboy!” — | The child's mother quickly corrected the boy: | she said “No son, that isn't a cowboy. that's | Chief Neiss." — — — — — Can you see the resemblence?”’ * * Little Jackie wasn't feeling very well so his | father suggested that he might be coming down with the chicken pox, which was so pre- | valent in that neighborhood and sent the boy to bed. | The next morning Jackie came down with a serious look and said, “Guess youTe right, Pop. I gc chicken pox alright. Look, I found a feather in the bed”. * * * Frank Sprout and his wife may have a tu- | ture on TV. Quite a few here recognized them | when they showed up on the interviews be- | tween wrestling matches in Chicago last | Wednesday night. Wayne Griffith interviewed | both Frank and his wife regarding their week's | | vacation which they spent in the windy city. | * If you don't see Jack Benneit around much evenings it's probably because he has! | | | | { | | two more rooms to paint and 20 feet of con- crete to lay before he switches jobs in the near fature. * * x A bartender I know down at Lancaster went | to the west coast with his wife and applied for a job at the employmeni agency. The conversation went like this: Interviewer: “Have you an occupation?” Applicant: “Yes, I'm a bartender.” Interviewer: “Well, we can’t do anything for | you do anything else? | for more Americans to die. And then in|Can you pick lemons?” some future year, what will some Memorial Day speaker have to say of their sacrifices? Yep, we're confused! * * Grassroots Opinion Marion, I1l., Weekly Leader: “The great principle of democracy religious field . . . Respect for one’s neighbor, { er's name was | | | | | { can be applied to the | The father's name was Appiicant: “Can I? This is my fifth wife.” - . - - - He's quite a picker. Xx * * Do you mind if we pass on a little shaggy bear story? Here ‘tis— Once upon a time, there were three bears. “Shut-up”, the moth- “None-of-your-Business; and whether or not he agrees with your strict the baby's name was “Trouble”. beliefs, is an American principle too often abused.” { Trouble ran away, so Mother and Father Bear got in the car and went to search for him. | Sunnyslope, Arizona, Journal: “The Rus- | | their anxeity. they didn't realize that they | sians automobiles. They would say it’s a lie to see our High School boys and girls driving to school in their jalopies. Who has stopped them from getting what we have? Certainly not the United States. No—their leaders are to blame.” Springhill, La., Press: “James A. Linen, publisher of Time magazine, speaking to the national radio audience from the Metropoli- tan Opera House in National Opera Day, said: ‘Apparently one of the things we are going to keep with us in our new world is music. One of the most important things that has got to happen if the United States is to maintain its position of leadership in the world is for the rest of the world to give us credit for culture as well as bathtubs. * * *. After Two Decades Secretary of the Treasury Humphrey has stated that the federal budget cannot be balanced in the next fiscal year, despite sub- | stantial cuts in appropriations. There will be a deficit, and it probably will be neces- sary to again increase the legal debt limit. As the Portland Oregonian said editorially, “It took two decades to get the government and the taxpayers into this mess.” We can’t get out of it overnight. In the meantime, the ‘Administration must be encouraged in its effort to reduce costs as rapidly as possible —and the people must have the character and the resolution to accept and applaud the fact that the Santa Claus era seems to be ending. That won't be easy. But it will be infinitely easier than the national bankrupt- cy that would inevitably result from con- tinued unbridled spending. don’t believe workingmen own | were exceeding the speed limit until a police- | wouldn't disturk your slumber.” man stopped them. He asked Father Bear what his name was. | and Father Bear said, “‘Shut-up”. He asked Mother Bear what her name was and she re- plied, “None-of-Your-Business”’. At this the po- liceman said, “Are you looking for trouble?” “Yes,” said ithe two bears. “Which way did he go?" — — — Anyway, it helps fill this col- | umn! * * * | “Young man”, said an irate North Barbara Sireet father from the head of the stairs, “didn’t I hear the clock strike four when you brought | my daughter home?” "You did,” admitted the daughter's escort. “It was going to strike elev- en, but I grabbed it and held the gong so it The {father could only mutter, “Dawgone! Why didnt I think of that one in my courting days.” | # * * * The man who becomes disgusted with his | golf game should put fire in his iron instead | of his iron in the fire! * * * It isn't good manners to hold a piece of meat in your hands as you eat it, but it's good taste if you can afford to buy meat | * * * Here's a lille poem one of our pipe smokers | | | sent us: Perhaps | have no cause to gripe: { Yet. this is what provokes it— | My wife not only smokes my pipe. But, what is more, she smokes it! A WISE OWL | jon a [Joy R William Haines and family. | Rhoads NEWTOW Mrs. Joseph Wittle and daughter Ju- dy, Columbia; Mr Charles Wit- tle, Columbia R. D.,, Mr, and Mrs. Ragner Hallgren, Mt. Joy Mr. and Mrs. Goldsberry and family, Calif., visited Mrs. Ser- | ena Fegie, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McFar- land, Columbia, visited Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Witmer. Mrs. Nancy Mellinger and daughter, visited Mrs. Wilma | McFarland of Columbia. The Ladies Aid Society wish- 's to thank all who helped to make our food sale a success. Wednesday evening Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Arndt attended the festival of the Lafayette School in Lancaster where their grand- | daughters are pupils. Weekend guests of Rev. and Mrs. R. H. Arndt were: Mr. and Mrs, Habet M. Khelghatian and | Ridley Park, Pa. | children of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin L. Camp- bell and children, Lancaster. Mr. and Mrs. Havard Johnston, and Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Lefever, | l.ancaster, Mrs. Rose Zerger of Columbia | who is an assistant at the Arndt | blood poison- | Home is ill with ing due to a cut finger. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Smith and sons, of Wrightsville visited Mr. and Mrs. Earl Geltmacher and family. Mr. and Mrs. Victor Fogie of | Philadelphia, visited Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Fogie and family. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Witmer | and children, and Mrs. Mabel ry Harnish of Goodville. Mr. and Mrs. John Kauffman | and | Sr., Ironville, visited Mr. Mrs. Pearl Brenneman, Mr. and Mrs. Jacob @Geltmacher and granddaughter Diane visited Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Witmer and family of Esbenshade Road | on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Shuman | visited Mrs. “Matilda Derr. Recent visitors of Mr. and | Mrs. Mrs. Robert Frank and family were. Mr. and Mrs. Ray | of Manheim, | Gamber and son, Mr. and Mrs. George Sheetz| and daughter, Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Koser and Mrs. | Jean McKee Columbia R. D. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Oli- | Mr. and Mrs. ver Witmer were and Wm. Weaver, Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Landis, of | Lititz. Pfc. William Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Miller while | weekend visit with his parents was taken ill now a patient at the St. Joseph Hospital, Lancaster where he underwent an operation for ap- pendicitis. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ho- ward Gamber were Mr. and Mrs. Salem Gamber and daugh- ter, Columbia R. D. Mr. an | Mrs. Oliver Haldeman and fam- ily, Mt. Joy R. D. Miss Louise Rhoads and Annie Werich, of Middletown. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Mau rice Frysinger, Mrs. Katie Moore anl Mrs. Ida Eisenberger | were, Mrs. Edward Reichart and daughter Edith, Mrs. Ralph William. Mrs. Mabel Stetter, of Hanover, Mr. and Mrs. William Smoker, and daughter, Mary, Gordan Diffenderfer, Mrs Violet Shannabrook, Edith Rhoads, of Columbia, Mr. and Mrs. Elvin | Shannabrook, Lancaster, Miss | Ella Sherk, Mrs: Harry Beam- enderfer, Mrs. Mary Divet, Mt. Joy. Mr. and Mrs. Havard Johnston, Lancaster. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Nentwig and family, of Florin, Mr. and Mr. and Mrs. Henry and daughter of Lititz Mr. Horace Wagner, D. visited Mr. and and Mount Mrs. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ab- ram Gamber were Miss Louisa and Annie Werich, of Middletown. Mrs. Katie Moore, Mrs. Ida Eisenberger, and Mrs. Blanche Frysinger visited Mrs. Emma Givens, Middletown. Visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Ed- | ward Isler and Mrs. Irene Sny- der. were Mr. and Mrs. David Alleman and son, Dale: Mr. and | Mrs. Aubrey Boles and daugh- | | ter, Marietta. Mr. and Mrs. El- wood Snyder, Mr. and Mrs. | James Gerber and family, of E- town. veekend visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Geltmacher were Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Keith, and | grandson Terry, Lititz Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Farlow and | son Timmy, Hopeland. Recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Erb were Miss Gla- dvs Weitkamp, Wrightsville, Mrs. Mary Lucas, Miss Minnie Erb, Mrs. Howard Erb daughters, Mt. Joy R. D. Mrs. Harry Weaver and Harold Wit- mer, Columbia R.D. > ——— PERSONALS Mrs. S. Callahan, the former the former Sophie Pyle, form- erly of Mount Joy, now of the near Lititz, Mark, the Speedwell Farms, and Mrs. Mary B. former Mary Heilig, town for a few hours last Wed- nesday. Both lived here 58 years ago. Mr. and Mrs. Robert H. Bru- | baker and daughter. Betty Ann, were visitors in town on Friday. Their son, Robert, is a United States Marine, stationed at Cherry Point, N. C. Dre Stimulate your business by adver- tising in the Bulletin. | Visitors of Mr and Mrs. Ar- | [ istic Wittle were Mr. and Ness visited Mr. and Mrs. Har- | and is] Rollman | visited | about | | steam at once, but by those who | International Uniform sunday School Lessons 11 Corinthians 8, 9 Scripture: Luke 6:27.38, Devotional Reading! Serve By Sharing Lesson for June 7, 1953 | A FIELD of soy beans in North 4 C ‘arolina; 97 head of steers in | Colorado; a calf and eggs in Blos- som, Texas; 1500 boxes of apples in Washington, hogs in North Da- | kota What ties all these together? These | and people in every part of the nation | have been joining in such plans for more than 22 years now. The idea i§ to dedicate to the Lord's service a field, some head of cattle, whatever the farmer or housewife owns or can grow. The projects are varied; they are generally success- ful; but the great- est success has | been in the happi- | | Dr. Foreman have worked on these things. rt 4 | Themselves First The innumerable people shared in dedicating their work in this way to God and his cause, have simply turned into action and experience what St. Paul laid down long ago to the church at Corinth. The Corinthian Christians were city people, not country peo- ple: but they were poor, not rich. Paul is urging them to give what they could, as they could; and in doing so brings out at least four | principles of right giving. First and foremost is that the best givers had first of all given their own selves to the Lord. The church has learned long ago that St. Paul was right. You can't ex- | pect big contributions or hard work from those who are still es- sentially selfish. You have to con- | vert a man’s heart before you can convert his money. And even if | you gave God everything but your- | self, you would not yet have given the very thing He wants most | of all. * w » Sharing the honor | “They simply begged us to ac- | cept their gifts and so let them share the honor of supporting their { brothers in Christ.” So Phillips translates II Cor. 8:4. Paul is de- | scribing the’ way in which the churches up in Macedonia had contributed to what we would call the benevolent funds. Christian giv- ing is all in the way the giver looks at it. If it is thought of as a bur- [ den, ifit is thought of as something only the wealthy can rightly do, if | it is thought of as something the | preacher keeps begging for, a kind of chore at best, then of course the giving won't be much. It will be only enough to keep from | giving nothing at all. But giving in the cause of Christ, for the use and help of God's people, is an op- portunity, not a chore. There is all the difference in the world between the giver who says (in effect), “Well, , if you must have some- { thing...” and the one who says, “Do let me get in on this.” * FF | The Lord Loves The Bible does not encourage any one to fancy that he can buy | his way into God's favor. God's smile is not for sale. God loves a cheerful giver, even though He sel- dom turns away givers of any sort. A sour and selfish man might be high-pressure into gloomily squeezing a few dollars into the church budget, and these dollars will do some good; but the Bible does not suggest that God cares much for that sort of giving. Giving till it hurts may be good; but giving till it doesn’t hurt is better! We remember Jesus’ comment on | the offering of the wealthy Phari- sees and the paor widow. Is there any one who can think God loved her and them alike? * and | Carrying Through So there are three principles of | Christian giving: personal dedica- | tion, a sense of privilege in shar- | ing God's work, and enthusiasm. | As Paul puts it (again Phillip’s | translation): “Show that you can complete what you set out to do with | as much efficiency as you showed readiness to begin.”” (II Cor, 8:11.) | A good Lord's Acre project calls springtime. It has ,to have hard work most of the summer. The | work of the church, of mankind, is best carried on not by those who blow all their | save up some steam for the long steady pull. Long mileage’is worth more than a flashy start. > | (Based on outlines copyrighted by the | Division of Christian Education, Na- tional Council of the Churches of Christ in the U. S. A. Released by Community Press Bervice.) ~ | : | Bins { y who | and chickens in Wisconsin. | hundreds of other products | grown on farms were ‘‘Lord’s Acre” and ‘Lord's Livestock” | projects last year. Thousands of ness and satisfaction of those who | - for moresthan enthusiasm in the | and indeed | every undertaking for the welfare Quality Meats ALSO A FULL LINE OF FROSTED Fruits KRALL'S Meat Market WEST MAIN Electric and Gas Welding Also Specialize On FARM MACHINE WELDING AND EQUIPMENT flutomobile and Truck Welding LAWN MOWER SHARPENING Cover's Welding Shop Delta and Marielta Streets Phone 3-5931 FOODS & Vegetables WHITE - WASHING DISINFECTING HESS BROS. FLORIN, PENNA. 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