Newspaper Page Text
Georgia FHA Plan
Convention In
Atlanta May 2-3
Fashions and fun will have
priority ratings when Georgia’s
puture Homemakers assemble in
\tlanta May 2 and 8 for their
“i.te convention. Smart, inexpen
.ive clothes for teen agers will be
Jramatized and glamorized in a
pashion Show put on for the sec
ond vear by Davison’s. Teen-age
mrodels will illustrate the latest in
ioen toggery which can be made
by the homemaking students
themselves at small cost.
ore {amily and community fun
v be the subject .of talks and
demonstrations given by Miss
Catherine Allen, native Georgian
who has become nationally recog
nized for her recreational work in
Tennessee, Miss Allen, now doing
sraduate work at New York Uni-
Versity, is a member of the fac
uly at the Universily of Tennes
o and was Knoxville’s “Woman
of the Year” two years ago. She
plays an accordion and demon
strates to youth groups ways in
which they can promote better
recreation among their homefolks.
One of the eight purposes of the
FHA is the promotion of whole
some recreation,
Georgia’s Future Homemakers
will bring to their 1952 convention
new high records in membership:
15.742 high school homemaking
students organized into 362 chap
ters. Bettye Tate, Atlanta girl,
who is state president, will pre
side at the convention’s business |
sessions. Her picture is on the
cover of the April issue of Teen
Times, national Future Home
maker magazine. She was recently
named by the Elks as “The most
valuable high school girl in At
lanta” and also won the DAR}
“Best Citizen Award.” |
Carolyn Black, Florida’s state
nrosident @nd the national treas
wer of the Future Hor&emakers,;
will be the speaker at the Presi
deat’s Breakfast to be held Satur-!
day morning. She will interrupt
ter senior class trip to New York
in order to be at the Georgia can
vention, and go by plane to catch
up with her classmates at Rich
mond, Va. ‘
('andidates for state president
will be Marilyn Middleton of
Blakely, and DeLoyce Strickland :
of Meultrie. Georgia will also
nominate this year a candidate forfl‘
the office of national vice-presi
dent. Awards and honors to be
given out at the state convention
will include the bestowal of the
Inez Murray College Scholarship
award to two outstanding high
school homemaking education se
niors who plan to continue these
studies at college this fall. Each
award is made up of two thousand
nickels given by each individual
FHA member, The awards are
named to honor Mrs. J. Milton
Murray, Macon homemaking
teacher and state president of
American University Women.
Honor roll chapters whose
school and community achieve
ments have been outstanding will
receive recognition. State Home
maker -degrees will be conferred
on girls who merit it by their
achievements and leadership qual
ities in FHA. Eight Georgians are
also named each year so receive
Honorary Memberships in the Fu
ture Homemakers organization.
Names of all the recipients of
these various honors are to be
kept secret until the convention.
A new award, given this year
for the first time, will be that
which goes to the chapter whose
public relations chairman has done
the best job of interpreting FHA
activities to its community. A list
of the year’s ten best news stories
and ten best news pictures in
FHA will be made public also.
Baker High School students
from Columbus will present an
afternoon program on “Home Life
AP Newsfeatures '
FAMILY TROUBLE often starts when a man begins to act up |
in public. Often you can follow the drama by watching the |
expression on his wife's face. That is the case in the cument
t . oo
movie ''The Marrying Kind."”'
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JUDY HOLLIDAY is the injured wife in the film. Here she
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& AN | TUDEN T — jacqueline du Bief, French
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r Center, New York, on arrival to join a show. |
Around the World.” Many chap
ters will take part in talent shows,
recreation features, and discus
sions of FHA work during the
three day session. On Saturday
afternoon, a sightseeing tour of
Atlanta will be held. The conven
tion will end Saturday evening
with a glittering formral banquet,
the candlelight service, the instal
ation of the new officers and an
address by President George P.
Donaldson of Abraham Baldwin
College in Tifton.
State Council officers putting
the final touches to the convention
program this week said, “This
looks likely to be the most excit
ing and wonderful state conven
tion that Future Homemakers
have ever had.”
Delegates all over Georgia are
dusting off their weekend bags
and packing their prettiest dresses
just now, getting ready to repre
sent the 362 Future Homemaker
chaptérs at the Atlanta conven
tion.
Among the things they’ll find
will be the convention issue of
their Georgia FHA News contain
ing his favorite steak recipe and a
picture sent them by Gary Crosby,
oldest son cf Bing.
HAVING BABIES
SAFER NOW
DENVER —(AP)— An Arizona
doctor says having a baby is eight
times less dangerous for an Amer
ican woman than it was only 20
years ago.
Dr. Preston T. Brown of Phoe
nix said in an interview that “A
sensational development in the
progressof American medicine” is
responsible. :
He said the national average 1s
now less than one maternal death
for ach 1,000 live births. Up to
1930, the average was eight deaths
of women during pregnancy or
child birth for each 1,000 babies
born,
In 1952, Italy had almost twice
as many automobiles as in 1940,
the figures being 705,844 and 358,-
208.
In 1800, every large European
country, including Spain and Tur
key, had a larger population than
the United States.
WEDNESDAY, APRIL 30, 1952.
The first tob;cco is believed_g
have been taken to Europe in
1558. s
DURING ATHENS SAVINGS DAYS
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HANCOCK & FRANKLIN
Benjamin H. Hill
BY ROBERT ASHFORD
In one's contemplation of the
“Grand Architect” of the Uni
verse, one is vividly impressed
with the magnitude of the Su
preme Intelligence, which harmo
niosuly directs and guides innum
erable worlds, which he has cre
ated toward destinies that are yet
untold, and which are incompre
hensible to the mind of finite man.
Yet, upon the planet upon which
we reside, we are likewise im
pressed by the sublimity of Infi
nite wisdomr concerning the mys
teries of Natutre which inspires
the mind with the sublime con
ception that the hand of Divine
Providence intervenes in the pro
gressive development of all man
kind, when one recalls to mind the
historic events with references to
ages that have served their pur
pose upon this terrestial sphere,
and passed into the “Great Un
known.”
One is therefore impressed by a
representation concerning the
passing of the “Old South,” which
resulted in the War Between the
States, vividly expressed in that
well known book, written by that
great woman, Margaret Mitchell,
with the impressive title, “Gone
With the Wind.” By this book we
are reminded among our reflec
tions that the Old South, with its
numerous traditions of the his
toric past, is gone forever; how=-
ever, among the noted characters
of former years one is also re
mrinded of the eminence of that
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
great lawyer and statesman
known as Benjamin H Hill,
This noted Georgian was gxe son
of Mr. and Mrs, John Hill. He was
born in Jasper county on Septem
ber 14, 1823. His father having
moved from North Carolina in the
early years of his manhood. He
was a farmer for many years of
his life u¥ until the t{ma of his
passing. Though he was a man of
limited means, he and his wife
were interested to a great extent
in the affairs of his church, in
which they were numbered among
its most enthusiastic members,
and their children were brought
up under the Christian ideals re
vered by their parents.
Therefore, the early years of his
son, Benjamin H. Hill, was in
stilled with religious conceptions,
which he cherished throughout the
period of his entire life.
In his youth as a schoolboy, he
impressed his teacher with his re
markable ability for learning the
lessons submitted to him and his
classmates. Around the sixteenth
year of his age he was admitted
to the sophomore class at the
University of Georgia, and was
numbered among that institution’s
most brilliant students.
Shortly after finishing his
course at the University of Geor
gia, he studied law for a year un
der a noted lawyer friend of the
Hills, and was admitted to the bar.
Having entered the legal profes
sion, he returned to the city of
Athens, where he married Miss
Carolyn Holt, the daughter of a
wealthy family of that city, whom
he met while a student at the
University.
After the marriage he and his
wife remained for a while in the
city of Athens, but finally moved
to LaGrange, but in the later years
of his life they went to the city
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READY FOR TRIP HOME — Pompadour, & red
| breasted merganser duck, ils ready for flight back home around
L Arctic Circle after a crushed leg was healed at Marineland, Fla.
of Atlanta, where they remainedi
until the time of his passing, Aug
ust 16, 1882, I
As orator and statesman, this
noted Georgian, in the course of
his eventful career, is probably
unsurpassed in the excellence of
his marvelous achievements, and
the eloquence of his oratorical de
clamations engraves his name up
on the pages of t&e historic past.
Though Benjam H. Hill was
opposed to secession, he adjusted
himself, as far as possible, to the
conditions which prevailed at that
critical time, and adhered with
patriotic zeal of the true statesman
to his native state and the entire
South which he dearly loved, and
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imade use of his genius and ora=-
torical abilities for the promotion
lof ideals which inspired the minds
of its patriotic adherents in con
nection with the destiny of the
“Old South” at that critical period.
However, after the War Be
tween the States, like other noted
Georgians, he strived to promote
the ideals of a greater and better
South, and a harmonious coopera
tion of all states in relation to a
greater and better nation, based
upon the democratic ideals upon
which this American governnrent
was originally founded.
In the month of December,
1875, he entered the Congressional
race from his district, and was
twice elected to that Important
office in which he exercised his
great skill in the cooperation of
a naw and better South.
The progressive accomplish
ments of this noted Georglan dur
ing the later years of his life
leaves a remarkable Impression
upon the minds of all who are
familiar with his great achieve
ments in the later years of his life,
In 1877 he was elected to the of
fice of the United States Senate,
in the course of which he reached
the penacle of his gerat achieve
ments.
At the present timre, the name of
this illustrious Georgian stands
out prominently with such noted
characters as Jefferson Davis, Al
exander H. Stephens, Robert
Tooms, and other noted charac
ters who are inseperably connect
ed with the annals of the “Old
South.”
The old colonial homestead
where Benjamin H. Hill once re
sided on Prince avenue in the city
of Athens, is numbered among the
historic landmarks in this section
of Georgia.
The writer, in closing his casual
reflections concerning some of the
principal achievements of that
'eminent lawyer and statesman, he
recalls to mind a poem which he
’read in former years, from an old
engraving, which left an impres
sion upon his memory which was
never forgotten: ‘
“In childhood’s hour with careless
joy, .
Upon life’s stream we glide,
’With youth’s bright hope we gayly
speed, .
To reach the other side.
Manhood looks forth with careful
glance,
Time plies the steady oar,
While old age calmly waits to l_'nfa\
The keel upon the gshore.”