8—=The Bulletin, Mount Joy, Pa., Thursday, June ‘18, 1953 I Miss Rachel Hess | 1 he Dutch Philosopher Weds Harold Ruhl When f 1 thing) kindly remember the Bulletin in necd of Printing, (any- JAMES B. HEILIG The wedding of Miss Rachel Hess and Harold Ruhl, both of Funeral Director Donegal Springs Road, Mount Joy will take place today at 2 MOUNT JOY, PENNA. p. m. in the Mount Joy Menno nite Church Henry Frank will give the ermon and Bishop Henry Lutz will officiate at the ceremony. 4 The Maid of Honor will be Miss Helen Heistand, Maytown. > Serving as bridesmaids are Miss Elmer G. Strickler Erma Espenshade, Mount Joy Elizabethtown, Pa. Phone 117 | R2, and Miss Mary Jane Zim “YOU BUY ONLY THE INSURANCE |merman, Elizabethtown RI YOU NEED UNDER MY COMPLETE Family Security Fire - - Auto - - Life Accident & Health - - Hospitalization AND MORTGAGE IINSURANCE 35-tt 3 aT ‘Deserves a The Start LET Koser’s Jewelry Store Phone 3-5404 Clair Charles Ruhl, brother of the groom will be the man Hollinger, East Peters- Daniel Hess, brother the Richard Messick, of Manheim R2, and James Bom berger, School Lane, Mount will serve as ushers The bride will wear dress, made of nylon with a sweetheart neckline, long pointed sleeves, and a full skirt. She will carry white roses with a white handker- chief. The maid of honor will wear nylon or- best burg, of bride, Joy a white organdy, 3ible and a a yellow dress, also gandy, and will carry aqua ros- es and a handkerchief. The bridesmaids will wear aqua dresses and carry yellow roses handkerchief. The attendants carry Tes- taments. Music will be furnished by an octette composed of Donald and Richard Frank, Park Miller, Robert Shearer, Eileen and Jo- anne Hess, and Thelma and Lois Wolgemuth. The bride is employed by Dr. Kensel, Mt. Joy and the groom is employed as a milk tester in Tioga County. cert lesen Terry Lee Zink Now Fully Recovered and a will also Terry Lee Zink, seven-year- old son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Zink, 43 Old Market Street, has recovered from serious injuries sustained in a truck-bicycle accident here June 1 and was seen about town this week. The small boy suffered a pun- ctured liver when a truck op- erated by John Wagner, Eliza- bethtown R1, caught one of the handlebars of his bicycle, crush- ing him beneath it. Admitted to the Lancaster General Hospital, he underwent an emergency op- eration. DQ Arn + Everybody reads newspapers but NOT everybody reads circular ad- vertising left or: their door step. 16 E. Main St. Mt. Joy, Pa. TT wr ar oe ee -/ =o 1] =i p18 = a in your. 0 4% rE. ’ -— \ i \ ~ ! > AD>TK Ser 7) AH 8 9 \ J eet N72 \ —— \ J what service NU home 7 (AS OVERHEARD BY JOHN BOYD) come on inside Mrs Veiss where it’s warm. Our cel lar heater is running chust lo take the chill off the house. Set near the radiator still. Well down here Yes the middle of here it 1 Chune and if it wasn’t for the | green trees and grass a body would think it was fall already Now I guess we will soon read in the papers that this was the cold est and wettest Chune since 1876 or some such date. Yes, that will be next that is how the weather bureau people put in the time. Figuring how every day and every month I guess breaks some kind of a record. Well, what's new? ] Wasn't you to the Firemen's corn soup celebration? Yes, I and Chorch went. We had lunch there around noon and Chorch took such a gallon can along that he brought home full of soup. 1 we will have corn soup for a week ’til it’s all gone. Chorch is crazy about it still. Now me, I would like it better if it didn’t have no corn in it. The corn makes it too sweet like for my taste, although every- body else seems to like it the way it is. Yes, the way it would prove that all right. Chake watched people coming home and he said he did not believe there was an empty can left in | Lititz. i. Yes, guess and Bob Trimble told Chorch that they had a big sale | hardware store. People that didn't have a |ecan no doubt figured that this would be a good excuse to buy |one. I never saw so many differ- ent kinds of cans and chars. Yes, everyone had one — even the little children. Why didn’t you and Chake go? | Chake don’t like corn soup | much. He says he likes soup that la body can swallow easy anc quick, not soup that is so full of |meat and corn that you got to | chew each spoonful for five or i ten minutes. And of course I | didn’t want to go alone. I had in- | tended to go and get chust such (a quart char for myself and then |it stormed so bad I didn't want to wenture out and get my feet wet. I am so afraid I will have | arthuritis if I get wet feet. Chake would of offered to drive me | down but he was having the car inspected. | Yes well, a body can’t have | everything. If you feel hun now I could easy heat up a pf of cans at his |it will go into the garbage can | anyway. | Well now, I don’t want to put you to all that trouble, Mrs. Es- penshate — | It’s no trouble at all. Come on | out to the kitchen and I'll get it [ ready. I am afraid that I ain’t | got any {fresh crackers though {Set here at the table and | | | i { | (With an increasing number of local boys returning home from service with the Armed Forces the following communication | from the U. S. Veterans Admin- | istration at Wilkes-Barre is pub- { lished for their information. Ed. Note) | H. E. Shirey, Chief of Voca- | tional Rehabilitation and Educa- {tion of the Wilkes-Barre Veter- {ans Administration office, has listed some helpful hints for vet- erans planning to start training this summer under the Korean | GI Bill. First and foremost, a veteran | should give plenty of thought to | his choice of a training goal, and | to the program that will enable { him to reach it. Under the law, | he may be allowed to change his | program no more than once, so | it’s to his advantage to choose right in the first place. The goal—which must be se- | lected before training can begin may be educational, such as earning a degree; professional, such as law or medicine, or voca- tional, such as becoming a car- penter or television repairman. Veterans who are not sure of | their objectives may receive vo- ' requires no investment in equipment? ... never costs you a cent for repairs? * ... is your servant every hour of the day and night? | Mr, cational counseling from the VA { without cost. Shirey pointed out that [ veterans should make sure that ...saves time...saves traveling... saves trouble? | schools and job training estab- { lishments they select have been ...is on duty for any emergency? ... gives you the greatest value s, for your money? LA ofr . “iy I The answer to all these can only be— i a, 3 telephone service When you add up the benefits and consider the worth there can be no doubt that the versatile value of your telephone service far exceeds its low cost. 5 COLUMBIA TELEPHONE CO. | | tablishment—stating that he ac- approved for such training by | the Pennsylvania Department of | Public Instruction. Next, he reminded veterans to take along enough money of their { own to tide them over for at least [the first two months of training. It takes that long, under the Korean GI Bill, for a veteran's | first GI allowance check to reach him. The reason is that the allow- ances are paid some time after the end of each month of training completed. But before the VA can make a payment, it must re- ceive a certification—signed by the veteran and his school or es- disappeared | big | of soup for you because a lot of | VA Lists Pointers F or Vets maybe I'll eat a plate with you. enough. What do you think about | | | { There it’s on the stove al- ready. Would you like some | | coffee maybe? | i : | No, chust the soup will be this peace over in Korea. Do you | think the war will be over soon? | That I wouldn't know, It seems like everybody wants peace ex- [cept the communists. Chorch | won't say a thing about it either which chust goes to prove how uncertain the thing is because {he always knows it all about | everything. He says there's too (many if's and’s and but’s about fit and besides, we ain’t beat the | communists good enough to make (them anxious to quit fighting. | Chake says he thinks at times we should drop a couple of them | atomical bombs on them. Chust |a few little ones like a sample. I believe lots of people think that way too but the big shots are | afraid it would start another | world war number three. ! Look — the soup is chust about [to boil over! Then it’s het enough to eat. { Here's your plate, I'll get another | for myself. The smell of it gives la body an appetite. How is it? Chust right. A little more salt {maybe. Put some in yours and |it will sort of kill the sweet | taste that you don’t like. You are right. It does taste better with more salt in it. Well, live and learn, I always say. Now wait once. I am going to look in the cupboard for some — yes, here’s a box of crackers. I for- { got I had bought some yesterday. I chust can’t enchoy soup with- out crackers. It ain’t stylish but I like to break them right into my soup — like this. So do I. Style is all right when {a body is at a restaurant, but at {home my crackers goes into my [ soup like always. It's like a lot {more of them things that is in [ the etiquette books that an edu- | cated person ought not to do. Like tipping you soup plate to get the last drop — like this. Won't you have some more, Mrs. Veiss? No — I have had enough. But you know me — waste not, want not. But now I have to be getting over home although I don’t feel much like getting something to eat ready. Well — it’s only four o’clock. No doubt by six you'll be hungry gain, That could easy be. Well, good bye now. Good bye. EE Sober A “hang-over’” on New Year’s Day was virtually unknown among the Mayas who inhabited Central Amer- ica about 2,000 B.C. The Ancient Maya's celebration of the New Year was ‘‘a sacred time of fasting and prayer.” ‘Who Plan To Start Training tually was in training during that month. Allowance checks usu- ally go out within 20 days after VA gets the certification. The monthly GI allowances are the only payments made un- der the Korean GI Bill. With the help of these check, veteran- trainees must meet all their own training expenses—tuition, fees, books and the like. As another point to be kept in to check over carefully their ap- plication forms, and make sure they're completely filled out, be- fore mailing them to VA. A pho- tostat or certified copy of separa- tion papers must accompany the applications. Incomplete applica- tions can mean unnecessary de- lays, the VA official said. Veterans who know what their training program and objective are must list these items on the who want VA counseling as an aid in making up their minds, merely leave these two sections blank and, instead, fill in the section that requests counseling. VA has one final reminder for veterans who know what courses they want to take. These veterans should make their own arrange- ments for gaining admittance to the school of their choice, and file their applications at the earliest possible date. CHICKEN CORN SOUP SUPPER JUNE 20th A chicken corn soup supper by the Ladies’ Fire Company Auxiliary to the Company will be held June 20, 4:00 to 8:00 P. M. in Cooper's Electrical Store. ee AT CHIQUETAN Peter Nissley, local boy scout, is serving as one of the staff of twenty supervisors in charge of activities at Camp Chiquetan this summer. ier aed Minin nis Patronize Bulletin Advertisers. @ mind, Mr. Shirey urged veterans | Salunga Fire | | application. Those who don’t, and | \ A oN NAN A 7% A " an i) | \ WN International Uniform Sunday School Lessons i 5-8, Devotional Reading: Galatians 6:1-10 Seripture: Galatians Free-Then What? Lesson for June 21, 1953 “WO kinds of people pay little attention to law. One kind is made of very bad citizens, so bad that sometimes they lose their cit- izenship. The other kind is made up of those who are the best cit- izens, Sometimes they even re- ceive medals or other honors from their communities or from the state. How can this be? The answer is that the first kind live far below the law; the sec- ond kind live far above it. Crim- inals and crooks are cause they are anti-social, are enemies of so- ciety and do not want to be a part of the community. § But the other kind § of people go far beyond the law, as we saw last week. | The best husbands probably do not lawless be- they know what the laws are which govern husbands’ Pr. Foreman treatment of their wives. The best fathers may not know what the statutes are which prescribe the duties of parents, These husbands and fathers are far better than any law could make them. * Law In One Word All this is true of the law of God, too. His laws are not a precise number of statutes and ordinances. His laws are not a code like a fed- | eral code or a municipal code. The | entire law of God is summed up, Paul says, in one word, Love. Now moment deny that we is thinking about loving one's neighbor as oneself. No law, shelf-full of statute books, no en- cyclopedia of decisions by the Su- preme Court, can cover all cases. But love does cover all cases. You cannot always tell what the law says in a given case. Maybe the law says nothing at all. But love always has something to say. Love | always has an answer. * * * We Know Love Even if you do not know what the law is, you always know what love | is. Because we do know, naturally and always, what it is to love our- selves. Loving yourself means keeping your own interests at heart, giving yourself the benefit | of the doubt. The divine law of love is: Be just as much interested in others | as you are in yourself. Be willing to take trouble for them, out for them, give them the bene- fit of the doubt, think ahead for them. When St. Paul talks about Christians being free, he does not mean being free from love, but for love. What is it that ties us down and keeps us from loving our neighbor? Isn't it our love for our- selves? The Christian way of life is to be free from our own de- mands so as to be free to serve others. * ¥ * When The Bible Does Not Speak Some people think of the Bible as a kind of rule-book. Well, there are rules in it, and some of them are applicable to our modern prob- lems. But we have some problems in modern living that the Bible says nothing about. For instance: Shall a Christian use tobacco? Is it a sin for the Christian to bear arms? These and many other ques- tions are not dealt with in the Bible as flatly and sharply as ‘‘Thou shalt not steal.” For this reason, many Christians think that if the Bible does not mention some prob- lem in so many words, they are | free to do as they please about it. By no means. The Christian is free from the law as a curse, as a condition of God's favor, or as a cage; but he is never free from the law of love. And since God is love, and since love is the law of our life as Christians, then the Bible always does have something to say about every situation. It has at least this to say: What does love —God's kind of love—suggest? * * 5 Freedom And The Spirit Some Christians have made the mistake of thinking that if a per- son is spiritual enough, he will be set free from all human obliga- tions. They have supposed that the | law of love, in the sense of love to one's neighbor, is on a lower | plane somehow than love of God; and that if a man once gets up in the stratosphere of the divine love, then he can simply forget the world outright. No one who takes | his New Testament seriously can | make that mistake. Read in Gal. 5:22-25 Paul's list of the fruits of the Spirit. These are not ripened inysolitude, in with | others and in ‘their service. (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 Service.) | | . Playground Opens 7 |Schneider, D. Ramsey. (followiing players: W, that is: | Paul would not for a | ought to | love God supremely. But here he | no | watch | HEY FARMERS! Are You Short of Help? If So—Call Bob Hostetter ELIZABETHTOWN, R. D. 3, PA. E-TOWN 747R12 We Have a Self-Propelled Combine — 12 ft. Also New Holland Baler PLACE ORDERS EARLY (From page 1) ry, D. Aument, R. Becker, A.| | | { The B League consists of tho : Charles, | | B. Coover, L. Coover, H, Eisen | hauer, B. Etsell, D. Fackler, R } Funk, R. Gamber, H. Griggs, K. | Haines, J. Harnish, R. Hocken-! § berry, P. Hostetter, M. Kear, M | Kunkle, T. Lane, D. Mateer, T.|} Meckley, J. Meckley, W. Nissley | § R. Nornhold, A. Schneider, J.| | Phillips, P. Stehman, J. Steh | man, B. Stoner, D. Swartz, C i Zimmerman, J. Zink, M J4-41 Germ- er, T. Fellenbaum, R. Gantz, G. | mm a Holtzman, E. Funk. . 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THE SOONER YOU ORDER, THE MORE YOU SAVE WOLGEMUTH BROS., Inc. PHONE MT. JOY 3-9551 Florin, Pa. Stimulate your business by adver- tising in the Bulletin. | | PLUS TAX WITH A RECAPPABLE TIRE 3. 6.00-16 SAFE TRAC | 75 | PLUS TAX WITH A RECAPPABLE TIRE 6.70-15 SUPER FLEX. ¢ 6.00-16 CRUISER $ pLUS TAX WITH A RECAPPABLE TIRE PLUS TAX WITH A RECAPPABLE TIRE GEO. W. LEA MAN 208 EAST MAIN STREET PHONE 3-9351 MOUNT JOY, PA. OPEN DAILY TILL 6:00 P. M. MONDAY AND FRIDAY TILL 9:00 P.M. ° tae ONE OF MOUNT JOY’S LEADING TIRE AND APPLIANCE STORES a ¢ A i a —————————— A IE A A ee Te SG » — a a Ra A ne A Co tn same ee A ME