WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1965 ® Church News (From page 6) wount Joy Meunonite Church Mount Joy, Penna Sunday 9:00 a.m Sunday School. 10:00 a.m. Worship Service Wednesday 9:00 a. m. Sewing Circle will meet in the Sewing Room, Calvary Bibie Church Donegal Heights Sunday 9:15 a.m. Bible School. 10:30 a. m. Morning Wor ship Service. 6:30 p.m. Youth Meeting. 7:30 pm. Evening Worship Rev. Ronald Gibson, Bible Instructor at the Lancaster School of the Bible, will be speaking both morning and evening worship services. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting and Bible Study. 7:30 p.m. Junior Prayer Meeting. Trinity Evangelical Congregational Church David R. Wolfe, Pastor Sunday Lewis Hart, S. S. Supt. 9:15 a.m. Sunday School, Lewis Hart in charge. 10:30 a.m. Morning Worsh- ip. Sermon: ‘“He’s Coming Back!” 6:00 p.m. Junior C. E. 7:00 p.m. Evening Gospel Service. Sermon: ‘Too Much of This World” Monday 7:00 p.m. Girl Scouts Tuesday 3:30 p.m. Jr. Choir Rehear- sal. 6:00 p.m. High School C.E. Business Meeting. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Prayer Meeting. ing. Mrs. Mildred Berrier is the leader. 8:40 p.m. Senior Choir . Thursday 7:30 p.m. Busy Beacons Class meeting. Mi. Pleasant Church Brethren in Christ J. Earl Martin, Jr., Pastor Sunday 9:00 am. Sunday School B. Musser Forry, Supt. 10:15 a.m. Morning Wor- ship. Message by the pastor. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Prayer meeting. Cross Roads Brethren in Christ Church Mount Joy B. E. Thuma, Pastor Robert Sentz, Supt. Saturday 7:00 p. m. Cissionary Con- ference. Speakers - Rev. and Mrs. David Climenhage, and Edna Switzer. Sunday 9:15 a.m. Sunday School Hour, Mrs. Climenhaga and Edna Switzer. 10:30 a.m. Morning Wor ship. Rev. David Climenhaga will bring the message. 7:00 p.m. Evening Session, Rev. and Mrs. Glenn Frey. Tuesday 7:30 pm. Missionary Pray- er Meeting planned by W.M. P.C. Wednesday 7:30 p.m. Midweek Prayer Meeting and Bible Study. 8:45 p.m. Choir Practice. MISSIONARY CONFERENCE The annual missionary conference will be held at the Cross Roads Brethren in Christ chnureh Saturday even- ing, Oct. 30. and Sunday, Oc- tober 31. Featured c<»eakers for the Saturday evening and Sun- day morning sessions will be Rev. and Mrs. David Climen- haga and Edna Switzer, from the mission field of Rhodesia Sundav evening Rev. and Mrs. Glenn Frey, also on fur- lough from Africa, will be speaking. The public is invited. Patronize Our Advertisers ! Saint Mary's Roman Catholic Church Father Frederick J. Vaughn Pastor Sunday 8:00 a.m, Mass Presbyterian - Home News - Visitors for the week: Mrs. Arthur Davidson and Mrs. Gertie Linton, of York, for Miss Sarah Emswiler. Mrs. K. L. Stottlemyer, of Ronks, for Miss Mary Gregg. A group of twelve ladies from the First Presbyterian church, York, visited and toured our Home on Friday afternoon last week, Mrs. Dorothy Rand and Mrs. Heid Ladewig of Clint- on, N. Y., spent a short week- end in Mount Joy to visit Mrs. Betty Heikes and were our guests for dinner on Sun- day. Mrs. Charles I. Hoffman and daughter Nancy, and Mrs. Schuyler of Lebanon, visited Miss Mabel Walmer. Margaret McClure, Felton, Mrs. Marie Campbell, Air- ville, Mrs. Lois Tompkins, of Muddy Creek Forks and Mrs. Nadine Tompkins, Red Lion, visited and toured the Home. Mrs. Sarah Waite spent a few days with her sister, Miss Edna Buchanan, in Lan- caster. There were about 30 pres- ent in our Home on Wednes- day evening last week for the first Bible hour conduct- ed by the Rev. Harry Free- bairn, pastor of the Mt. Joy Presbyterian church. Miss Mabel R. Walmer seent several days in Leban- on visiting relatives and friends and attending the meetings of District #1 of Carlisle Presbytery. Miss Blanche M. Speer and Mrs. Mary Ruch spent the week-end in Collegeville and West Chester visiting rela- tives and friends. ® Team Wins (From page 1) crowd—mostly Donegal sup- porters — enjoyed the con- tinual march to Indian goals. The Tribe had the count at 28 - 0 before Cocalico count- ed in the second period. Donegal drove 58 yards from the opening kickoff, Gary Gohn plunging in from the one. Bill Sprecher kicked the extra point. It was the fiirst of six perfect tries. Quarterback John Hay passed for 14 yards and the second score to end Ken Weber as the first period ended. A blocked punt at the Co- calico 15 set up Donegal's next score. Hay again tossing to Weber for the score. Cocalico got on the score- board when Oberholtzer picked up the ball on a fum- ble pitchout and went 53 yds. Ken Smith's 68 yard run on the first serimmage play put the count 35 - 7 at half time. \ An 86-yard pass play from Barry Funk to end Rick Hean gave Donegal its third period score. An interception by Ken Derr set up Donegal’s final score at the Eagle 28, Dennis Gohn scored from the seven. This week, Donegal tries a night game on Friday at Man- heim Central. Kickoff is 8 p. m. Annex Play Thirteen boys and girls from one of the eighth grade sections at the Donegal An- nex presented a play, “Beat That Bongo,” last week. They were: Robin Hoffman, Donna Flick, William Bow- ers. Tom Spangler, Alice Smith, John Shrum, Neal Brubaker, Jean Kendig, Deb- bie Eichler, Herbert Hess, Margie Keller, Judy Sheetz and Nancy Wagner. Dewey Smith was announcer. Players, managers and the coaches who participated in the 1965 baseball program in Marietta were honored on Thursday night, Oct. 21, at a banquet, held at Hostetters Mount Joy. Don Wert, third baseman with the Detroit Tigers, was the guest speaker and pre- sented trophies and battirfg champions and standing rookie performers. by co-chairman John association president Yohe. David Brandt was toastmaster. The most valuable players selected and the age-bracket baseball they represent are: awards to the most valuable players,’ out- | THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA. Barry Gentry, midget-midget; Jeffery Shank, traveling mid- gets; Ron McCarty, junior midgets; Bill Reuter, midgets and Gary Gohn, American Legion. The batting champions are Howard Sharp, midget-mid- gets; Donald Pickle, travel- ing midgets; Harold McCurdy junior midgets; Steve Miller, | midgets and Bill Reuter, Am- erican Legion. The outstanding rookies in- The banquet was arranged clude Jack Dettinger, midget ( Gohn | midgets: and Dick Penwell, along with ior midgets: Bill midget, and Bill Stohler, Am- the |erican Legion. Frank, jun- Gohn, Dennis Dennis Roy Myers, chairman of the American Legion baseball program in Lancaster County, presented the American Le- ically wrong. a typical hypochondriac. cines. “He sprays his throat and nostrils and literally takes 5 or 6 different pills every mor- ning. . “Some are red and some are green. Others are yellow, blue or white. I “And he has patronized | four different doctors in the last year, but none of them seems to find anything ser- ious wrong with Harry. “That's why he changes physicians so frequently, or I really believe he keeps hunting some doctor who will pronounce him as sick. “Dr. Crane, what’s wrong with people who are such chronic worry warts about their health?” NEGATIVE THINKERS Fear is usually at the bot- tom of such cases. And fear is a Siantese twin of intro- vertive thinking. When you focus mainly on yourself, your = perspective grows narrowed. Then you begin to magnify innocent little gas bubbles percolating along your intes- tine and worry lest you have cancer or peptic ulcer. People who are a slave to their “innards” thus are not properly extroverted. They are too self-centered for their major focus is on S-E-L-F. dispose to the creation of worry warts. For example, a wife with children and many outside church, civic or PTA obliga- tions is not as likely to fear illness as much as a childless widow or a spinster or bach- elor. For when a person is liv- ing alone, he or she tends to wonder: “Suppose something should happen to me! Who'll look af ter me? “Why. I might fall to the floor with a heart attack but nobody’d miss me until I didn’t show up for work the nex{ day! And with such negative ideas flitting through the margin of her consciousness, the spinster (or bachelor) soon decides she better have a medical check-up. Since 70,000.000 Americans do not belong to any church at all, and are thus trying to go it alone, they begin to fell unduly oppressed with financial, as well as health worries. For nobody is ough or smart enough handle all his problems strong en- to by Social conditions often pre-; The Worry Clinic by Dr. Geo. W. Crane Harry is like 10,000,000 “worry warts” who call on doctors every week. He actually has nothing organ- But he is a slave to fear. sex complex that I'll outline tomorrow. But scrapbook this case or mail it to other hypochondriacs. CASE T-443: Harry G., aged 42, is a “worry wart.” “Dr. Crane,” his vivacious wife began, “Harry must be |Mariettian planted them in a And he has a “For he frets all the time about his health. And he keeps our medicine cabinet full of pills and bottled medi- himself. Teaming up with God thus relieves. such tension and lowers blood pressure, too. But the 70,000,000 are not partners with the Almighty. So they tend to shift their allegiance to physicians and almost worship the M.D. That's why we medics are swamped each week with millions of worry warts who have no diagnosable physical ailments whatsoever. For 50% of our office prac- tice (20,000,000 patients call on doctors every week,) is composed of hypochondriacs. The best advice for worry is thus to link up with a neighborhood church and be- come partners with the Al- mighty. Then select a suitable part- ner and get married! For married men live several years longer than bachelors and don’t need as many pills. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, en- closing a long stamped, ad- dressed envelope and 20c to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.) Patronize our Advertisers PAGE SEVEN At Marietta - Baseballers are Honored gion Award to Gary Gohn, for his outstanding ability on the field. We " Community Chorus The first practice for the Marietta Community Chorus will be held in the Marietta Methodist church on Sunday, Oct. 31, at 7:30 p. m. The Cantata, ‘Wonder of the Star,” has been chosen as this year’s production. Mrs. Gerald Libhart will direct the choir and has extended an invitation to anyon: in the area who enjoys music to join the group. Officers elected to serve the current year are: Robert Erdman - president; Hofman Charles, vice president; Mrs. Gerald Cranford, secretary and Elizabeth Cranford, trea- surer. Mrs. LeRoy Simmons is music chairman. * * * Cotton Plant A display of cotton in bloom is at the home of John Herchelroth, Biddle Street, Marietta. Receiving the seeds as a gift from a southern native to whom he served refresh- , ments several years ago, the {unique container, made from scrap cable and formed into a tub-shaped planter. The seeds were planted one week after Easter of this year. Without any unusual care, the plants have erupted pods which are bursting into the typical crop of the south. * * * Antiques Authority Joe Kendig, an authority on antiques, was the guest ‘speaker at the regular meet- ing of the Marietta Resiora- tion Associates on Thursday inight in the Marietta Com- munity house. Kendig who has ssisted with the York restorations of ithe Plow Tavern and ates House said that the buildings ‘man construct reflect the fads ;and fashion that man has as he surrounds himself with beauty. Architecture is the measurement of man’s cultur- al art expression more than any other culture, he explain- ed. Dr. Brown, president of the organization announced that a room is available for the group's use in the Com- munity house, where the win- ter meeting will be held. Forms were distributed to be used in the survey of homes with backgrounds of struc- ture or historical interest. A social hour followed the meeting. - to eat, a week-end resort, shop or perhaps a house or ment . . .. read the PHONE NAME WELCOME VISITOR...! If you've newly arrived, looking for the newest shows, the best places church or synagogue, places to your apart- «om ove rm EWS AW WU GEN ev GNU DUN SN AN NIG ASH UN DNS KG SUN SN SHG MW OUND MR SND MEN SY WELCOME NEWCOMERS! Use this coupon to let us know you're here ADDRESS CITY [7] | would like to subscribe Fill out coupon and mail to [] Please have the Welcome Wagon Hostess call on me [7] | already subscribe to the to the Circulation Dept,