The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, February 02, 1966, Image 7

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WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 2,

1966
THE BULLETIN, MOUNT JOY, PA.
PAGE SEVEN

® Church News
(From page 6)
two hour sessions for al
pre-school children.
10:30 a.m. Morning Wor-
ship; David Grimm will
speak of “Alcohol, A Chal-
lenge to the Church.”
7:00 p.m. School Social
Concerns; Rev. Olden Mitch:
ell of the Lititz Church of
the Brethren, will speak on
“How Christians Deal With }
Social Concerns.”

Church of the Brethren
Salunga, Pa.
Rev. Russeli Beahm, Pastor
Paul Cope, Moderator
Ezra Herman, S. S. Supt.
9:00 a.m. Church School.
10:00 am. Morning Wor
ship Service.
Wednesday
7:30 p.m. Prayer & Bible
Study by Norman Bower.
Thursday
6:45 p.m. Junior Choir re
hearsal
7:30 p.m. Senior Choir re-
hearsal.
Florin Church oi Brethren
Rev. Howard Bernhard
Moderator
Sunday
8:50 p.m. Sunday School
10.00 a.m. Worship Service
Bible Institute Speaker; Pro-
fessor Jobie Riley Jr.
fram E-town college
7:30 p.m. Evening Worship
by Rev. Riley.
Wednesday
7-30 p.m. Bible Study and
Prayer meeting.
Thursday
7:00 pm. Jr. Choir rehear-
sal.
7:45 p.m. Sr. Choir rehear-
sal.
Evangelical United Brethren
Glossbrenner Church
Charles W. Wolfe, Pastor
Sunday
7:00 a.m. Youth Fellowship
Communion Breakfast
9:30 a.m. Divine Warship
Christian Instruction.
5:45 p.m. Youth Fellow-
ship.
7:15 p.m. Evening Bible
Study (Discussion Group).
Wednesday
7:00 p.m. Midweek Service
8:00 p.m. Program Council
Thursday
6:45 pm. Junior Choir
rehearsal
7:30 p.m. Senior Choir Re-
hearsal
Friday
7:00 p.m. Boy and Girl
Fellowship.

St. Luke's Episcopal
Church
Mount Joy
The Rev. Donald H. Feick
Rectrar
Sunday, Feb. 6th
“Septuagesima’
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer
and Church School
11:00 a.m. The Holy Com-
munion & Sermon
6:30 p.m. Jr. Youth Fel
lowship.
7-00 p.m. Adult Inquirer’s
Class.
Tuesday
7:00 p.m. Jr. Choir Re-
hearsal
7:30 p.m. Sr. Choir Re-
hearsal

Trinity Lutneran Church
The Rev. W. L. Koder
Pastor
Sunday
9:15 am. Sunday School
10:45 a.m. Morning Wor-
ship.
Tuesday
7:30 pm. Group II, LCW.
will me-* in the Parish house
Wednesday
1:30 pm. Group I LCW.
will meet 2° the home of
Mrs. Wm. S*-ickler
7:30 p.m “hurch Council
meeting in the Parish House.
Thursday
6:00 p.m. Junior Cateche-
tical Class.
7:60 p.m. Confirmation
Class.
Harold J. Frey, president
of the Fulton National Bank
announced the following
changes at the Keystone-
Manheim Branch office:

Church Movie
At Cross Roads
“Anything Can Happen!”
is the title of a new 40-min-
ute motion picture scheduled
for public showing at Cross
Roads Brethren in Christ
Church, Feb. 8; 7:30 pm.
sponsored by the Men's Fel-
lowship. Everybody is wel-
come.
Produced by the National
Association of Evangelicals,
the film is a candid probe
into the attitudes and actions
of Christians in today’s chur-
ches. Characterized by some
as startling, this new black
and white documentary uses
on-the-spot interviews in a
concerned examination of
church membership.
“Hunger for the power of
God, desire for spiritual re-
newal, search for meaning—
all thread through the wvar-
ied reactions from Sunday
school pupils, lay people and
pastors,” reports one review-
er. Opinions regarding the
church today are gleaned
from interviews in homes,
offices, public terminals, on
the street and through the
mail.
The film contrasts the com-
fortable climate inside the
church with the restless
search that goes on constant
ly outside its four walls for
something that can satisfy.
“We must be enlisted in
finding God's ways for the
20th century,” says NAE’s
general director, Dr. Clyde
W. Taylor, who appears in
the film. Also seen comment-
ing on the present-day church
situation are other evangelic-
al leaders: Dr. Bernice Cory,
senior vice-pres. of Scripture
Press; Dr. Robert A. Cook,
president of the King’s Coll-
ege; Dr. Jared F. Gerig, pres-
ident of the National Associ-
ation of Evangelicals and Ft.
Wayne Bible College; Dr.
Ted Engstrom, executive vice
onresident of World Vision;
Dr. Stan Mooneyham, special
assistant to Billy Graham;
Dr. G. Aiken Taylor, editor,
The Presbyterian Journal,
The Reverend Frank W.
Smith, vice-chairman of the
Open Bible Standard Chur-
ches; Dr. Arthur M. Climen-
haga, executive director, of
N. A. E.
Youth Sunday
Is Postponed
Because of the snow storm
last Sunday, Jan. 30, Youth
Sunday will be observed in
St. Mark’s church at all ser-
vices Sunday, Feb. 6th.
In the Adult Assembly of
the Sunday School at 9 a.m.
Alice Kleiner will be the pia-
nist, Barbara Meckley, Song
leader. The scripture for the
Sunday School lesson will be
read by Doris Reist and pray-
er offered by Barbara Meck-
ley. There will be special
music by Dawn Heisey and
Terry Gemberling. Karen
Yingst will give the monthly
mission presentation.
The list
and classes being taught by
them are as follows:
Jean Reist, Cheerful Giv-
ers; David Hostetter, Trust-
worthy Sons; Linda Zerphey,|
Young Peoples; Robert Ston-
er and Kenneth Gephart,
Young Adults;
ter, Willing Workers: Vickie
Kendig, Good Cheer; Bonnie
Lauver and Sandy Stahl, Sis-
terhood; Robt. Hershey, Cru-
saders; Timothy Emenheiser,
Christian Couples; Dawn
Heisey, Young Couples.
Youth will also be partici-
pating in the Morning Wor-
ship service with the pastor
speaking on the subject,
“Youth Builds!” The celesti-|
cal choir will also be partici-
pating.
At the 7:30 service in Fel-
lowship Hall, Ray S. Holling-
er. a ministerial student at
Elizabethtown college and
local youth director will be
bringing the message.

When in need of orinting
remember The Bulletin.
of young people
Jack Hostet-|
Wednesday, Feb. 9, will be
a special day in the lives of
Mr. and Mrs. John M. Heisey
305 North Barbara street.
For, on that day they will
mark their 55th wedding an-
niversary.
Although both are in reas-
onably good health, it ap-
peared doubtful this week
that they would have an)
special party to celebrate the
occasion. Heisey laughed this
week as he recalled that on
their 50th anniversary they
had planned to have a special
observance. But, he said, it
snowed about like it did this
past Sunday. The party was

Mark 55th Anniversary
off,
The Heiseys were married
at the home of her parents,
the late Mr. and Mrs. Samuel
N. Becker, by her 70-year-old
grandfather, Elder Hiram
Gibble. She was Anna Gibble
Becker.
They have four children —
Verna, wife of Elam Snyder
of Lititz R1, Grace, wife of
Damon Packard, Elizabeth-
town, Arlene, wife of Paul
Wenger, Quarryville R1, and
J. Stanley Heisey, Manheim
R1. There also are 13 grand-
children and 6 great grand-
children.

ered about half an acre.
Moreover, the weeds were
taking over. So it looked to
me as if I had an impossible
job.
My mother then came out
to see what I was doing.
She sensed my half-hearted
outlook, so she seized my
hoe and vigorously started
chopping away at the weeds.
“Don’t look at the whole
patch,” she advised me, “for
that will be discouraging.
“Just focus on one hill at
a time. And then imagine
that it is the last one you
you need to hoe.
“After you finish with it,
then take the next one and
also make believe that it is
the last one.”
LITTLE STROKES
This is excellent Applied
Psychology, for most of us
get discouraged when Wwe
view total tasks that consume
many hours or days of work.
Human beings crave quick
victories’
It is easier to maintain
morale when we can finish
tasks in a short time.
“Little strokes,” said Ben-
jamin Franklin, “fell great
oaks.”
That quotation shows that
Ben Franklin also apprecial-
ed the need to bolster morale
by taking the piecemeal
viewpoint. :
In my case, I have author-
ed several books including
college texts in psychology
that ran over 800 pages.
If I were to view an 800-
page chore, I'd NEVER get
started on such a Herculean
task. i
So I first made an outline
of the 21 most popular fields
of Applied Psychology.
Then I split each chapter
into the ten most significant
subdivisions.
On my written daily “ag-
enda”’ I'd then list just one
of these subheads.
Thus, I figuratively bit oif
small bites which I could
handle in one day’s writing.
And when I finished to-
day’s subhead under Chapter
"I. I crossed it off my agenda

with a thick red pencil to
inflate my morale.
|" Next day, I tackled the
second subhead. And after a
(couple of week, I'd thus
have an entire chapter fin-
, ished.
In six months, the 846-page
textbook was finished. And it
1 didn’t seem like such a Her-
culean task, after all, for I
| had employed Ben Franklin's
“little strokes” technique.
Teen-agers, use this same
“agenda” method for pre-
paring your lessons and writ-
ing term papers or English
themes.
Housewives, do the same
for each day's household
chores, including small items
like washing the Kitchen


The Worry Clinic
by Dr. Geo. W. Crane
My mother had studied the psychology textbook
William James, our pioneer American psychologist, so
she used psychology on us children, including the “lit-
tle strokes” technique of Benjamin Franklin. Be sure to
employ the daily “agenda” plan, too,
CASE U-409: When I was a boy, aged 11, I was put
out in the potato patch, hoeing weeds.
It was on my grandmother's farm and the patch cov-
dishes ,as well as larger tasks
like ironing.
Even then, break down
your ironing into “flat work”
vs. “shirts,” etc.,, so you can
scratch out more items on
your agenda.
(Always write to Dr. Crane
in care of this newspaper, en-
closing a long stamped, ad-
dressed envelope and 20e¢ to
cover typing and printing
costs when you send for one
of his booklets.)
ANTIQUE SHOW
American Legion Conewa-
go Post 329, Elizabethtown,
will present an Antiques
Show and Sale from 1 to 10
p.m. March 17-19 in the Eliz-
abethtown Legion Home.
The event, part of the
post’s observance of the 47th
anniversary of the American
Legion, also will feature pri-
zes and a snack bar.
Proceeds will be used to
support the post's child wel-
fare program, including Jun-
ior Legion baseball.

THE CHURCH
IN FOCUS
.
Electric Frypan
An electric frypan or a
deep-at fryer frees one space
on the range and gives con-
trolled heat, says Mrs. Cecile
Sinden, extension home man-
agement specialist of Penna.
State university. The appli-
ance, however, does not pro-
vide new cooking possibili-
ties.
Skillet, frypan, and buflet
pan are names for similar
appliances. The only differ-
ence is in the shape and the
number of handles. All the
appliances are used to fry,
stew, bake, or pan-broil foods
The frypan is a versatile
utensil, for it can serve as a
chafing dish or a food warm-
er for such foods as rolls,
casseroles, and stews.
A deep-fat fryer,
cooker-fryer as it is some-
times called, can be used to
roast, steam, or bake foods.
It also can be used to warm
dinner rolls and as a buffet
pan when you entertain,
Mrs. Sinden points out.
Although it is a less ver-
satile appliance, a griddle or
grill does offer a large cook-
ing surface for quick cooking
of meats, eggs, or pancakes.
In electric frypans, you'll
have a choice of aluminum,
stainless setel, metal alloys,
and ceramic. Some covers are
dome-shaped to give extra
cooking space. Some fry-
pans have a nonstick coating,
but they are more costly.
Before using a new elect-
ric appliance, read the in-
structions for its use and
care, advises Mrs. Sinden. A
new model may have use and
or a
care instructions different
from the one you replaced.
The manufacturer has pre-
pared these for use, so f{ol-
low them carefully. Keep the
instructions in a convenient
place where you can refer to
them as needed.
Presbyterian
- Home News -
Muja Nokamuro, Hawaii,
Instructor of Nurses, Wash-
ington, D. C. and Miss Helen
Chance, Christiana, were the
guests of Mrs. Mabel Meyers.
In spite of snow, Mr. and
Mrs. Thomas, nephew of Mrs.
Rose Sprengler, called to see
her Saturday.
 



 
That's what the young people and
the adults want the church to do
—focus on their problems—long
enough—and realistically enough
—to find some satisfying answers.
And that's just what happens in
this dramatic 40-minute picture
called ARVIHING CAR FARRER]
Cross Roads Brethres In Christ Chui
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 8 ~ 7:30 P.M.
SPONSORED BY MEN'S FELLOWSHIP
EVERYONE WELCOME:



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