

To whom it may concern, Please cancel my subscription to Kids’ Bulletin. I no longer work in this position. I realize I may not be reimbursed for February, however, this email is no longer a serviceable email, so I just realized your email was in my junk. You can send an email to this email address, and I now know to check my junk mail for your response. Thank you for your bulletins. I hope all is well with your family.
God Bless,
Mrs. Beth Scholl
Is there a way to separate images for download? Only partial page like the crossword puzzle for 2/11 bulletin?
Hi! There isn’t a way to do a partial download, but if you download the .jpg image files (or download the PDF and save it as a .jpg) then you can open in image in any graphics app and crop the image down to whichever puzzle you want to use. Hope this helps!
Thank you.
To whom it may concern, Please comment that you received this notification to cancel this subscription to The Kids’ Bulletin. New Administration will not approve it.
God Bless,
Mrs. Beth Scholl St. Joseph Church 25 E. Harrison Ave. North Bend, Ohio 45052
Hi Beth. I’ve sent you an email.
Why am I seeing the email response to Beth Scholl?
Hello Everyone!
A pleasant afternoon to you. Thank you once again. Glad to tell you that many children are now getting copies of the Kid’s BUlletin. We will be reproducing more this coming Sunday and onward. God ever bless you and keep you.
Shalo, Vicenta
Could you please send me the next two weekends of the kids bulletin for FEB 18th and the FEB 25th? I will be gone so I would like to prepare a head of time
Thank you Pauline
I found your “Secrets” lesson (Feb 11) troubling and ill-advised. With it’s history of child abuse, the Catholic Church is the last place that can be trusted as an authority on secrets.
Secrets in general are not healthy for relationships, and it is not age-appropriate to expect young children to keep a secret, or to be responsible for protecting others by keeping their mouths shut.
A healthy alternative may have been a lesson on not spoiling a suprise, how Jesus preferred to do good deeds without calling attention to them, or how Jesus was not afraid to be close to the sick and disfigured.
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