Newspaper Page Text
8-B
The Summerville News, Thurs., Nov, 16, 1972
H Chelsea News|
By Mrs. Tom Gamer
Phone 862-2427
Mr. and Mrs. Johnny Mar
shall, Regina and John K were
Friday night guests of Mr. and
Mrs. J. H Willingham.
C. M. Crye is back at home
with his daughter, Mrs. Mozellc
Willingham, after several weeks
visit with his son and wife, Mr
and Mrs. Moseley Crye. of
Summerville.
Mrs. Ruth Lemon and
daughter. Mrs. Elanor Belk,
and her children, Mark and
Michael of Cleveland, Tenn.,
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mrs. Lemon’s sister, Mrs
Warner Wilson, and family.
Recent visitors of Mr and
Mrs. Warner Wilson and family
were Mrs. Guy Smith and Mr.
and Mrs C. L. Fletcher and
son. Charles, and daughter,
Marie, of Adairsville.
Mr and Mrs. George H
Payne and children, Mrs. Don
Gilley and sons, and Mrs. Bud
Sumner and children were
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs Howard Bailey and
Nell
Mrs Patricia McDonald and
girlsand Mrs McDonald’s aunt
visited Misses Beulah and
Annie Garner Wednesday after
noon
Sunday dinner guests of Mr.
and Mrs J II Willingham
were Mrs Jean McGraw and
children, Mr and Mrs. James
McCrickard, Mr and Mrs.
Johnny Marshall and children
of Tullahoma, Tenn,, and Mr.
and Mrs Lonnie Willingham.
Regina and John K Mar
shall visited Mrs James Mc-
Crickard Saturday morning
Mrs. Mamie Williams visited
Beulah and Annie Garner
Sunday afternoon.
Mrs Glenda Ray and chil
dren visited Mrs. Mozelle Wil
lingham Saturday afternoon
Mr and Mrs T. G. W'right
made several visits in La-
Fayettc Sunday afternoon in- 1
eluding the Frazier family. Mr
and Mrs Ab Stoker, and Mr
and Mrs Wilhe Wright
Mr. and Mrs Joe Fleam Jr
visited Mrs Mattie I learn on
Sat urday
Mrs Mane Houser and boys
were Sunday dinner guests of
Mr and Mrs Felton West
brook Afternoon visitors were
Mrs Bonnie Clowdts, Marylin
Harris and Kris, and Kathryn
and Steve Hayes.
I am glad to report Ralph
Wilson was able to return to
school alter being a patient at
Floyd Hospital.
Mrs Glenda Ray and chil
dren were Saturday night
supper guests ot Mr and Mrs
James McCrukard
Mrs John Cross of Blanche.
1 - ■
Grady
Allan
Watchmaker
and
Jeweler
Now Located tn
Allan’s
Fabric
Korner
S. Commerce St
PHONE
857-3344
2(1 ) ears
Experience
in .411 Types of
JEWELRY
WORK!
- Ala., and Mrs. Alma Pope
• visited Mrs Marie Wright Tues
-1 day afternoon.
Mrs. Marie Wright and David
: -visited Mrs. T. G Wright late
■ Tuesday afternoon.
i Mrs Grace Sentell visited
Mrs -Marie Wright Sunday
night.
Lisa and Angie Garner of
I Trion visited their grand
. parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. W
Garner, over the weekend
Mr. and Mrs J. D. Welch
and daughter and Mrs. Michael
Thurman and baby daughter,
of Fresno, Calif., visited Mrs.
Welch’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Kelly V. Hammond, and other
relatives last week among those
being the Clyde Days
Mrs Mattie Fleam was :
Sunday dinner guest of Mr and ■
Mrs. Earl Smith and Mrs. Ida
Fleam, and was also their Sun
day overnight guest
We send get well wishes to i
Miss Bessie Jones who under
went surgery at Floyd Hospital ;
I'ict u/ppk
Mr and Mrs J D Welch,
Mrs Michael Thurman and
baby, and Mrs Mattie Howard
visited relatives in Ft Payne
Sat urday including Mrs. Ger
trude Francis and Mr and Mrs.
J. C. Francis.
We send get-well wishes to
Mrs Clara Knox who under
went surgery last week
Rev. and Mrs. Billy Wright
and Joy enjoyed Sunday
dinner at the Tavern in Trion.
Sunday visitors of Mr. and
Mrs Ernest Cooper and family
were Mrs Glenda Simmons,
Mike and Joe of Kensington,
Mrs. Ruth York, and Mrs.
Hattie McConnell
Mr. and Mrs George Henry
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Cooper Monday morning
Tom Garner visited Mr. and
Mrs S P Railey Saturday
evening
Monday visitors of Mr and
Mrs Tom Garner were Mr and
Mrs Tom Gentry, Mrs Reba
Gill. Rusty and Thomas, and
Miss Beulah Garner
CPC Rates
Are Lower.
Report Says
Georgia Power Co.’s resi- j
dential customers receive their
electricity at bargain rates com
pared to their counterparts in
the nation as a whole, accord- i
mg to figures released this
week.
The local costs are com- |
pared to those from a Federal I
Power Commission (FPC) re
port entitled “Typical Electric-
Bills According to FPC. the
national average residential bill
for 500 kilowatt hours in 1970 i
was sll 13 A company j
spokesman said the Georgia
Power figure for 500 kilowatt
hours was $8.63.
Power company officials
noted that the average price
per kilowatt hour to residential
customers has declined steadily
since the company was
founded in 1927 In that year,
the average residential price
was 7.6 cents per kilowatt
hour, compared to I 73 cents
in 1971, which was 21 percent
below the national average
Die company said that since
its founding it has put into
effect 10 rate reductions and
only four increases
Ihe FPC has predicted in a I
studs called "Ihe 1970 I
National Power Survey’’ so
called because its figures are
current to that year that costs
per kilowatt hour will rise as
fuel, transmission and distribu- ■
lion costs, and increasing plant
investments, outpace the in- I
duMry’s ability to introduce
added efficiencies
J
Shamblin s
| Handy
|| Hints j
Z si
Control a ball of twine by
placing it tn a cup and running
the end through the handle
Shamblin Hardware stuck*
twim <n cotton, nylon, linen,
and other materials There is a
wide tinge ot sites also
Wl ’ f j
*
YOLANDA LEIGH Tallent cel
ebrated her first birthday anni
versary on Nov. 14. She is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Larry
Tallent, Route I, Jamestown,
Ala. Grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Cecil Tallent, Route 2,
Lyerly; Mrs. Maude Watson,
Centre, Ala.; and the late
Howard Nicholson.
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132 SOUTH COMMERCE ST.
PHONE 857-2456
1973 Teacher of the Year
A second grade public
school teacher who began her
career in education during the
early years of the Great De
pression is Georgia’s 1973
. Teacher of the Year.
Mrs. Kathleen Hobgood
White, who teaches at Holsen
beck Elementary School out
side Winder, received the award
at the Nov. 9 Georgia Board of
Education meeting.
Runner-up is Mrs. Ruth
Kimball Council, a second
grade teacher of 16 years ex
perience from W. G. Nunn
Elementary School in Val
dosta.
In presenting the two
teachers to the board during
the award ceremony, Georgia
Superintendent of Schools
Jack P. Nix praised both of the
winners for their long dedica
tion to public education. He
noted that they are both also
housewives and mothers.
"Once these women had
reared their own children, they |
realized that thousands ot
other Georgia children needed
answers to the endless ques
tions which curious young
minds conjure, so they both
continued their professional
careers in the classroom,” said
Nix.
The state’s outstanding
teachers, their husbands, and
Barrow County Schools Supt.
D. L. Hitchcock were guests of
one of the project’s co-spon
sors, Southern Educators Life
Insurance Co., for dinner and
an overnight stay in Atlanta
Nov. 8. The annual competi
tion is also sponsored by the
Georgia Press Association and
the Georgia Department of
Education.
Georgia’s winner will com
pete for the National Teacher
of the Year Award If Mrs.
White is selected as the nation’s
outstanding teacher, she will
receive another award at the
White House next spring.
Born on a Gordon County
farm as one ot eleven children,
Kathleen White said she has
always lived by her parents’
rules-“respect honest work;
wise use of money is more
important than the amount;
words that will not make some
one feel better should not be
spoken; and each person
should help the young."
She began teaching at rural
Oostanaula Consolidated
School near Calhoun in 1929
for S6O per month. In 1934
she was named assistant princi
pal at nearby Liberty Consoli
dated School, where she also
served as a teacher.
“We had a kerosene stove
and a sewing machine to teach
home economics to girls in one
section of the room. 1 brought
some simple, tools from home
for the boys to learn geometry
and shop in the other part of
the classroom. In addition, 1
coached the girls’ basketball
team while the boys worked
with a county agent to learn
basic agriculture,” Mrs. White
wrote in her biography.
She is a firm believer that
most students’ attitudes
toward learning are formed in
their early years of education.
“It is the primary-age chil
dren who open their troubled
hearts to an understanding and
listening teacher. Their ques
tions need answers and their
interests need stimulating. It is
difficult to rekindle a young
ster’s interest in education in
their later years,” she ex
plained. She strongly endorses
the non-graded (or “con
tinuous-progress”) approach to
school.
Mrs. White holds a Master’s
Degree in Education and a
Specialist Degree in Elemen
tary Education from the Uni
versity of Georgia. She has
taken courses at Emory Uni
versity, Shorter College and
Valdosta State College. Her
husband, Donald, was a high
school sweetheart. They have
four children.
She has been active in
Winder in several educational
organizations, the Parent
Teachers Association, garden
club, Lions’ Auxiliary and
various activities at the First
Baptist Church.
Mrs. Council, the Runner-Up
Mrs. Council credits her de
cision to become a professional
educator to her mother, who
also was a teacher.
A Valdosta native who was
educated in the city’s public
schools, Mrs. Council later at
tended Clark College on a
dramatic scholarship. She cur
rently is studying for her
Master’s Degree in Elementary
Education at Valdosta State
College.
She practices her teaching
philosophy that “a good
teacher likes life, is reasonably
at peace with herself, has a
sense of humor and enjoys the
company of other people.”