Newspaper Page Text
The Summerville News, Thursday, March 19, 1987
2-A
DEATHS
Death notices in The
Summerville News are
published free. There is
no charge to the family or
to the funeral home mak
ing the announcement,
A’ Y
Nellie Christian
Nellie Ruth Christian, 53,
Chickamauga Rte. 1, passed
away Saturday in a local
hos&ital.
rs. Christian was a
lifelong resident of the Chat
tanooga and North Georgia
areas and was a member of the
Mission Ridge Baptist Church.
A daugfiter. Mrs. Mary
Catherine Christian Farmer,
died earlier.
Survivors include her
widower, Claude W. Christian
Sr.; son, Claude W. Christian
Jr., Chickamauga; parents,
Charles Bruce and Catherine
Powell Cavin, Chattanooga,
Tenn.; brother, Cullen Eugene
Cavin, Homestead, Fla.; t%\ree
sisters, Mrs. Maxine Helton,
Chattanooga, Mrs. Christine
Hickey, Miami, Fla., and Mrs.
Winkie Capley, Chattanooga;
and several nieces and
nephews. '
Funeral services were held
at 11 a.m. Tuesday in the
South Crest Chapel of the Lane
Ellenburg
Monument
Co.
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Funeral Home with the Revs.
Everett Gossett and Lee Byrd
officiating.
Interment was in the
Tennessee-Georgia Memorial
Park in Rossvilfie.
Active pallbearers were
Eugene Cavin, Jimmy Lee
Cavin, Johnny Hickey, Bill
Helton, Michael Helton, Sonny
Boy Capley and Hood Capley.
Officials and staff members
of Combustion Federal Credit
Union were honorary
pallbearers.
"
Clyde Parris
The Rev. Clyde Cecil Parris,
70, Summerville Rte. 2, Penn
ville community, passed away
at 6:50 a.m. ’l‘Kursday at his
residence.
He was born in Floyd Coun
ty Feb. 22, 1917, son of the late
Frank Parris and Fannie M.
Fowler Parris. The Rev. Parris
was a veteran of World War 11,
pastor and member of the
Teloga Baptist Church. He was
former pastor of the following
churches: Wayside, Belmont,
Corinth, Broomtown and
Cedar Creek Baptist Church. A
son, ‘“‘Duck” Bonald Parris,
died in 1980.
Surviving are his widow,
Mrs. Opal filary Parris; two
daughters, Mrs. Ann Cothran,
Summerville Rte. 2, and Mrs.
Frances Busby, Acworth; three
sons, Cecil Parris and Donnie
Parris, Trion and Leon Parris,
Summerville; two sisters, Mrs.
Evie Parris and Mrs. Rella Par
ris, Rome; two brothers,
Nathan Parris and Dewey Par
ris, Rome; 22 grandchildren;
six great-grandchildren;
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held
at 2 p.m. Saturday in the
chapel of Erwin-Petitt Funeral
Home with the Revs. C. E.
Reece, Johnny Tinney and Clif
ford Ownby officiating.
Interment was in West Hill
Cemetery.
Active pallbearers were
J. B. White, Dean Tapp, Bob
by Thompson, Kenneth Estus,
Danny Murphy and O’'Neal
Elrod.
Honorary pallbearers were
all ministers of Chattooga
County and all members of
Teloga Baptist Church.
Lora Sams
Mrs. Lora Alice Palmer
Sams, 85, Trion Rte. 1, passed
uwu(i' Monday morning at her
residence, folllowing an extend
ed illness.
Mrs. Sams was born in
DeKalb County, Ala., Sept. 2,
1901, daughter of the late
Francis and Sally Chambers
Palmer. She was a member of
the Pleasant Grove church of
Christ. Her husband, Marion
Bleve Sams, died earlier.
Surviving are seven
daughters, Mrs. Lucille McGill,
Manchester, Mrs. Mary Nell
Parker, Chattanooga, Ms. An
nie Ruth Sams, Trion, Mrs.
Shirley Shields, Charleston,
S.C., Mrs. Betty Liner,
Chickamauga, Mrs. Frances
Lewis, Big Stone Gap, Va., and
Mrs. June Sparks, Meeley, Ky.;
three sons, Moten Sams, Trion,
Franklin Sams, Atlanta and
Douglas Sams, Trion; eight
grandchildren; several great
grandchildren; nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services were held
at 2 p.m. Wednesday in the Hill
Chapel of Lane Funeral Home
with Minister Hugh Glaze and
Minister Howard Sparks
officiating.
Interment was in West Hill
Cemetery.
Active pallbearers were
Raymond Palmer, Neal
Palmer, Max Waters, Thurman
Day, Hoyt Williams and
Homer McWhorter.
Honorary pallbearers were
the Ladies of Pleasant Grove
church of Christ.
Harold
Shropshire
Harold Robert Shropshire,
Riverside, Calif., formerly of
Summerville, passed away
March 9 in California.
He was the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Waldo
Shropshire Sr., a veteran of the
Korean Conflict, and member
of Pleasant Hill AME Zion
Church.
Survivors are one daughter,
Miss Kathy Shropshire, River
side; one son, Preston Shrop
shire, Atlanta; one sister, Mrs.
Mildred Moore, Nashville,
Tenn.; three brothers, Ralph
Shropshire, Summervill)e.
Howard Shropshire, Riverside
and Hardin Sfiropshire, Atlan
ta; one uncle, Tom Berry Fleet
wood; and aunt, Mrs. Jane
Fleetwood, Ringgold; four
grandchildren; one gaughter-in
law; three sisters-in-law; one
brother-in-law; nieces,
' nephews, cousins and other
Trion Classroom
Bid Opening Set
By KAY ABBOTT
Staff Writer
The Trion Board of Educa
tion made final plans for its six
classroom elementary school
addition during its meeting
Monday.
Bids will be opened at 3
&m. April 14 in the offices of
irkman Associates, 243
North Hamilton St., Dalton.
The six classroom addition will
include one s(fecial education
classroom and two restrooms.
NO BIDS
Construction of the new
superintendent's office is ex
gected to be%n this week,
School Supt. Bill Kinzy an
nounced. Ramsey Construction
Co. is in charge of the project,
which was awarded witl!mut
bids being submitted.
The board approved the ad
dition of a fireproof storage
area to the office in lieu of Yur
chasing several fireproof filing
cabinets.
“At a cost of SI,OOO for
each cabinet, 1 feel we can
fireproof a small storage room
for ap roximately the same
cost,’ Rinzy said. ‘‘We need a
safe place for our vital school
records.”
The fireproof area will have
fire rated sgeetrock and ceiling
material and a metal door.
NEW ROOF
The board opened bids for
a new roof at the football
stadium fieldhouse. The board
received bids for both tar and
gravel and rubber membrane
roofs. After choosing to use a
rubber membrane roof, the
board af)proved the low bid of
$4,875 for a single ply, 40x60
glued rubber roof by Lambert
Construction Company, Pied
mont, Ala.
Calloway Wells Construc
tion of Rome submitted a bid
of $4,950 for a single-ply rub
ber roof to be secured with
gravel ballast. The firm also
submitted bids for a tar and
gravel roof, $4,150; and a tar
and gravel roof with Y 2 inch in
sulation, $4,375. Lambert Con
struction Co. also submitted a
bid for a tar and gravel roof
with downspouts and Futters
for $3,479. DeKalb Roofing Co.
bid $3,300 for a tar and gravel
roof. i
The board unanimously re
elected principals Sue Hayes
and Clarence Blevins to their |
positions at Trion Elemen%
School and Trion High Sch@iol:
Board members commended
both principals for their perfor
mance during the past year.
‘““They are both doing
everything so well,” board
chairman Harold Peek com
mented. “We've had nothing
but compliments from the com
munity.”’
BASES
Superintendent Kinzy told
Two Hurt
In Wrecks
Two people were reported
hurt in traffic accidents in
Summerville during the past
week, including one that occur
red after Wednesday morn
ing’s rainstorm.
Officer Monroe Mathis said
Jeffrey Lynn Smith, 18, Sum
merville Rte. 5, was hurt in a
one-vehicle accident on Martin
Street at 9:50 a.m. Wednesday.
Reports said Smith com
plained of injuries after the ac
cident, and was taken to Chat
tooga County Hospital. Officer
Mathis said the gmith truck
was traveling east on Martin
Street when it went out of con
trol on wet pavement and
struck a tree.
One person was hurt in a
one-car accident last Thursda
that left a fireplug underneatl;
the vehicle, said Lit. Houston
London. He identified the in
jured person as WandaE. Par
ris, 48, 118 Roseway Cir., Sum
merville. Ms. Parris was taken
to a Rome hospital after the
mishap, reports said.
Lt. London said the Parris
vehicle was traveling east at
the U.S. 27-Highway 48 in
tersection when it crossed over
the traffic islands, knocked
down a sign, turned west into
the Dollar General Store park
ing lot and turned back left in
to a fire hydrant on Martin
Street and stopped on South
Commerce Street with the
hydrant under the front of the
car. The mishap occurred about
10:22 p.m., London said.
relatives.
Funeral services were held
at 2 p.m. Saturday in the Plea
sant Hill AME i'ion Church,
Gore Community, with the
Revs. James Dallas, Talmadge
Clark and other ministers
officiatin(f.
Friends and neighbors were
flowerbearers.
Interment was in Pleasant
Hill Church Cemetery.
Funeral arrangements were
by Willis Funeral Home,
Dalton.
the board that the Trion bus
fleet needed to be modernized
in order to meet state
standards.
“We do not meet state re
quirements for crossing arms,
lights, bus color or driver cer-
Lillication at present,” Kinzy
said. "'ln the past, because we
do not transport students to
and from school, we have been
lenient with our buses. Since
we have been unable to find a
satisfactory means of leasing
buses for school events, we
need to get our transportation
system in line.”
Kinzy recommended buy
ing use(l, buses from three to
five years old to upgrade the
fleet. He said that at a cost of
$30,000, each, purchasing new
buses would not be economical
ly feasible for the system.
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Library Board Appreciation Luncheon
vk 5 B s s &
The Chattooga County Library Board
?ave an appreciation luncheon last week
or Mrs. Martha Thomas and Mrs. John
Crawford whose terms of service have
been completed. The luncheon was held at
OPEN MONDAY THROUGH SATURDAY
9:00 A.M.-6:00 P.M.
The Round Table. Above Linda Floyd,
left, librarian, presents gifts to NI‘I'S.
Thomas, center, and Mrs. Crawford dur
ing the event. (Staff Photo by Kay
Abbott).
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