Newspaper Page Text
M » t :%*>v : fssMx .f^,
' "'^'^-J''^\%'-''- V. V Jr?
■T W' IjK'
IB? Hi
«H jl IHK
flHHn
'■'rfsgggf
|§|T tWP-T. ..
1 w ‘ • BF
‘
BB|»><..
KL» ■IIP*'
SB •-. :; HI •. \ &3KIBBI
I *j£ *•* A ■>- '',
),« A
jMHB
«Hbl 9p
'S j fIHHHI
■■■l . jhi
MARCIA STUERTZ
Stuertz- Wagoner
Wedding Is Set
Mr. and Mrs. Warren W.
Stuertz of St. Louis, Mo.
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Marcia Anita
Stuertz, to Patrick Sanford
Wagoner, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Sanford V. Wagoner of
Cumming, Ga.
The bride-elect is the
granddaughter of Walter
Stuertz and the late Mrs.
Amanda Stuertz and Mrs.
Florence Helfrich and the late
Frederick Helfrich Sr., all of
St. Louis. Miss Stuertz is a
graduate of Riverview
Gardens High School in St.
Louis. She is employed now
by the United States Army
Aviation Command of that
Farm Fresh Cooking
WATERMELON SHERBET
3 cups watermelon juice
V 2 cup sugar
Vs tsp. salt
1 envelope unflavored gelatin
Juice of one lemon
Mix first 3 ingredients. Remove about V\ cup to small
saucepan. Soften gelatin in juice in saucepan. Dissolve over
hot water or very low heat. Add with lemon juice to first
mixture. Freeze in crank-type freezer. Makes about 1 quart.
WATERMELON SALAD
On a large leaf of lettuce place a slice of fresh pineapple,
which has been sprinkled with a little brown sugar. On the
pineapple place a round of chilled watermelon, cut from a
thick slice of melon with a fancy cookie cutter. Top with one
tablespoon of fresh, cleaned, hulled raspberries, and garnish
with fresh mint leaves.
Fiw even tl dntg yeane Wliltw Beetwick Im been
building a nepuiaUm m Gwinnett Cmdy'e burnt
Wedding Phetegnaphen.
B(wfuiick'ft Plwta S&wice
P.O. Bex 206 921-2232 £Hbum, Gu.
city.
Wagoner is the grandson of
Mr. and Mrs. Ira Wagoner of
Monroe, Ind., and Mr. and
Mrs. Alvin Henry Fuller of
Atlanta, all deceased.
He received his Bachelors
Degree from Auburn
University in aviation
management. After his tour
of duty with the Army he will
return to Auburn to complete
ihis Masters Degree in
business management. He is
a member of the Theta Chi
fraternity.
The wedding will be August
24 at the Bellefontaine
Methodist Church in St. Louis.
New Service
For Citizens
ATLANTA—The Georgia
Department of Human
Resources has set up a
statewide information and
referral system that is the
only one of its kind in the
nation.
It is called Tie-Line and the
number is 1-800-282-4900.
There is no charge for the
call.
A Georgia citizen can call
the number to find out about
nutrition, drug abuse,
alcoholism, mental health,
day care centers, poison
plants, or literally any service
the state offers.
Joy Ruyle, Tie-Line
director, said it is a cen
tralized telephone system
jßwnia
A V- " ji
Bernm
MS Mr HR
asmttmgmr
i Hp
m IP' m B •
MR** m J^^^b
m - mm, ***** TOB
■PPw ' - •- fl|
'* Wk o fir Si’,
hP™ I Wilt 1 TOIL \ FWm*lM
«* BBH «* MMI
ELOISE WATERS
Eloise Waters
To Be Mrs. Cox
Mr. and Mrs. James L.
Waters of Rt. 1, Canton,
announce the engagement
and approaching marriage of
their daughter, Eloise, to Rex
A. Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Otis Cox of Rt. 2, Cumming.
Miss Waters is the grand
daughter of the late Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Taitingfong of
Guam and Mrs. Lewis Waters
of Lawrenceville and the late
Mr. Waters.
Cox is the grandson of Mr.
using state-wide toll free
lines.
“What all this means is
better service to citizens of
the state,” Mrs. Ruyle said.
“A listing of more than 10,000
service agencies and in
formation banks are main
tained. After learning the
caller’s identity, the coun
selor calls the service or
agency needed on an outgoing
line. The counselor then links
the client to the agency in his
town through an electronic
bridge.”
There are 17 counselors now
working Tie-Line phones from
8:30 a.m. until 6 p.m. By
January it will be operating 24
hours a day.
and Mrs. Clyde W. Cox, Sr., of
Cumming and the late Mr.
and Mrs. F. W. Johnston of
Canton.
The bride-elect attends
Cherokee High School where
she will be a senior. Cox is a
graduate of Forsyth County
High School and is employed
by Western Electric.
The wedding will be at 7
o’clock on the evening of July
20 at New Harmony Baptist
Church in Forsyth County.
■
mHi . JfjL fl
«■» . Wm Ba&sfc
1 r jfl
PAMELA WILSON TRIBBLE
Garden Ceremony
Set In September
Mrs. Rudolph Newton
Tribble Sr., of Cumming
announces the engagement
and approaching marriage of
her daughter, Pamela Wilson
Tribble, to Robert Lewis
Edmonson of Dahlonega and
Cumming. Edmonson is the
son of Rev. and Mrs. Charles
Lewis Edmondson of
Dahlonega.
Miss Tribble is the daughter
of the late Rudolph Tribble
and the granddaughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Linton H. Tribble
&•., of Cumming and Mr. and
Mrs. W. Herbert Wilson of
Canton. She is a 1972 graduate
of Forsyth County High School
and is employed at the Bank of
Cumming.
Edmondson’s grandparents
are Wash Rider and the late
Mrs. Lillie Rider of
Dahlonega and the late Mr.
and Mrs. Louis Edmondson,
also of Dahlonega. He was
graduated from Lumpkin
County High School in 1967
and is employed by Western
Electric, Norcross Division.
A garden ceremony will be
performed at 2 o’clock in the
afternoon of Sept. 28 in the
home of the bride.
AT SPM
GEORGIA GOES ON SALE.
After 5 PM on weekdays and all weekend long, you can talk for 3 minutes to anyone else
in Georgia for 80C or less plus tax. Just remember to dial direct without an operator’s assistance.
Any day of the week. Share a smile with someone you love. Dial long distance tonight.
Acworth
Adairsville
Albany
Alpharetta
Americus
Appling
Arlington
Athens
Atlanta
Augusta
Austell
Baconton
Bainbridge
Bamesville
Baxley
Blackshear
Bogart
Bowdon
Bremen
Brunswick
Buchanan
Buford
Calhoun
Camilla
Carrollton
Cartersville
Cave Spring
Cedartown
Chamblee
SHARE A SMILE. DIAL LONG DISTANCE TONIGHT. (2) Southern Bell
Dial-it-yourself rates do not apply to coin, credit-card,person-to-person, collect,
hotel-guest calls or calls charged to a third number, because an operator must assist on such calls.
I^-11
1 ‘ i# It fPf
1 i£ I r * 11 ■ l||
IpL' . 11-H
CALL BONNIE STONE
887-6456
Clarkston
Claxton
Clermont
Cochran
Colquitt
Columbus
Concord
Conyers
Cordele
Covington
Cumming
Cusseta
Dallas
Douglasville
Dublin
Duluth
Eastman
Eatonton
Elberton
Fairbum
Fayetteville
Flowery Branch
Forsyth
Fort Valley
Franklin
Gainesville
Gay
Gibson
Grantville
THE FORSYTH COUNTY NEWS—WEDNESDAY, JULY 10, 1974-
Book Exhibit At NGC
North Georgia College at
Dahlonega will host an exhibit
of instructional materials for
the benefit of area educators
July 11 and 12 in the College
Union Great Room and art
gallery.
VSI/A/ /
Let us help you get to know your new
community as quickly as possible. Our
hostess will call on you and present you
with gifts, greetings and useful informa
tion.
™ 887-8523
DRAPERIES
Custom-Made to
Fit your windows
FREE ESTIMATES
Greensboro
Greenville
Griffin
Hamilton
Hampton
Harlem
Hazlehurst
Hephzibah
Hogansville
Jackson
Jekyll Island
Jesup
Johnson Corner
Jonesboro
Kingston
LaGrange
Lake Park
Lawrenceville
Leary
Leesburg
Lithonia
Loganville
Louisville
Lula
Lumber City
Lumpkin
Luthersville
Lyons
Macon
There will be 15 publishers
represented and demon
strations will be conducted on
both days of the exhibit. A
number of Forsyth County
teachers plan to attend.
Madison
Marietta
McDonough
Millen
Monticello
Newnan
Newton
Norcross
Palmetto
Panola
Pelham
Pine Mtn.
Pooler
Powder Springs
Richland
Rockmart
Rome
Roopville
Roswell
Royston
Rutledge
St. Simons Is.
Sandersville
Sardis
Savannah
Savannah Bch.
Senoia
Smithville
Smyrna
PAGE 5
Social Circle
Sparks
Sparta
Statham
Stockbridge
Stone Mt.
Swainsboro
Sylvester
Tallapoosa
Temple
Tennille
Thomasville
Thomson
Tifton
Tucker
Valdosta
Vidalia
Villa Rica
Wadley
Warner Robins
Warrenton
Watkinsville
Waycross
Waynesboro
Woodbury
Woodstock
Wrens
Wrightsville
Zebulon