Newspaper Page Text
. .The Summerville News, Thursday, February 24, 1994
2-A
Deaths
Obituaries in The
Summerville News
are published free
of charge. There is
no charge to either
the funeral home or
the family of the
deceased.
Ammie Black
Mrs. Ammie Lou Black, 73,
Centre, Ala., died Thursday,
Feb. 17, at the Cherokee Bap
tist Medical Center.
Funeral services were held
at 1 p.m. Saturday in the Perry
Funeral Home Chapel with the
Revs. Alfred Inman and Bill
Crane officiating. Interment
was in Lawrence Cemetery.
Mrs. Black was a native of
Cherokee County, a member of
Gaylesville Baptist Church, a
retired inspector with Riegel
Textile Corp., Trion, and
daughter of the late William
“Dick’” and Callie Annie
Bishop Hawkins. Her husband,
01l Black, and daughter, Mar
tha Jo Black, died earlier.
She is survived by one
da;:ihter, Mrs. Evie Lou
Mackey, Gaylesville; five sons,
Bill Black, Jack Black, Larry
Black and Ricky Black,
G:glesvflle, and Jimmy Black,
Cedar Bluff, Ala.; one sister,
Mrs. Myrtle Weeks, Rome;
seven grandchildren; and seven
great-grandchildren.
Robert Craig
Robert Ramsey Craig, 93,
134 Georgia Street, Trion, died
at 11:50 p.m. Saturday at his
home.
He was born in Union Coun
ty on June 2, 1900, son of the
late Buck Crn'fi. Mr. Craig was
a retired textile worker and a
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HOURS: 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. Monday - Thursday
9 am. - 2 p.m. Friday
10 a.m. - 12 noon Saturday
109 North Commerce Street
Summerville Georgia 30747
Telephone (706) 857-7144
member of the Community
Holiness Church. A son,
Dillard Craig, died earlier.
Surviving are his widow,
Nellie H‘lanvggins Craig, Trion;
one son, Watson Craig, %.lyerly;
four daughters, Nellie Hilton,
Montgomery, Ala., Frances
Smith and Lucl}:oßrown, Sum
merville, and Louise Howell,
Summetille; 25 grandchildren;
several great-grandchildren;
and nephews and nieces.
Funeral services were held
at 3:30 fp.m. Monday in the
chapel of Erwin-Petitt Funeral
Home with the Revs. Leon Hall
and Paul Edgeworth of
ficiating. Interment was in
Summerville Cemetery.
Active pallbearers were
David Lyones, Terry Wayne
Lyones, Gene Rogers, Randy
Va'arren, Dann§ Hunt, Robert
Helton, Gary Brown and Ed
ward Campbell. Honorary
Eallbearers were Wilburn
Isberry and
great-grandchildren.
Mary Hudgins
Mrs. Mary Linda Hudgins,
45, Summerville Rte. 5, died
Monday morning.
She was born in Brooklyn,
N.Y.,, on March 11, 1948,
daughter of the late Joseph
Lynn Wade.
She attended the United
Christian Fellowship Church
and was a secretary in the con
struction industry. Her foster
father, Albert Riley, died
earlier.
She is survived by her
foster mother, Eunice Mae
Riley, Summerville; mother,
Mary Wade Barksdale, Centre,
Ala.; three daughters, Sherri
Orr Copeland, Summerville,
Cindy Orr, Dunwoody, and
Melissa Diane Maynor, Trion;
five brothers, Benny Joe Wade,
Summerville, Charles Wade,
Trion, Kenny Roder Wade,
Summerville, Larry Josefih
Wade, Summerville, and John
Hamilton Wade, Centre; two
st?sisters. Maxine Morgan
and Patsy Weevie, Summer
ville; former husband. Atlas
Hudgins; four grandchildren;
and several nieces and
nephews.
Funeral services will be held
at 4 p.m. today in the J. D. Hill
Funeral Home Chapel with the
Rev. Gary Howell officiating.
Interment will be in Summer
ville Cemetery.
Mozelle
Johnson
Mrs. Mozelle D. Johnson,
502 Vine St., Summerville, died
Tuesday evening at Oak View
Nursing Home.
She was a member of New
Hope United Methodist
Church, the widow of Luke
Walter Lee Johnson Sr. and
was retired from Mann
Manufacturing Co.
Surviviors are a daughter,
Nancy Powell, Summerville;
three sons, Luke Walter Lee
Johnson Jr., Summerville,
Fletcher Johnson and Charles
Johnson, Atlanta; three
sisters, Idella Black, Summer
ville, Jewell Echols, Trion, and
Velma Adams, Toledo, Ohio; a
brother, Harold Daniel, New
York; daughters-in-law; sons
in-law; sisters-in-law; brothers
in-law; 19 grandchildren; 25
great-grandchildren; a great
great-grandchild; nieces,
nephews and cousins.
Funeral services were held
at 3 p.m. Sunday in New Ho%e
United Methodist Church,
Martin Street, Summerville,
with the Rev. Larry P. Warner
and other ministers officiating.
Granddaughters were
flowerbearers and %'randsons
were pallbearers. Interment
was in Allgood Cemetery,
Trion.
Arrangements were made
by Willis Funeral Home,
Dalton.
Carrie Lee Jones
Mrs. Carrie Lee Jones, 86,
Lyerly, died at 4:22 a.m. Satur
day in Oak View Nursing
Home.
She was born in Chattooga
County on Dec. 7, 1907,
daughter of the late Felton and
Permealia Bagley Dempsey.
Mrs. Jones was a homemaker
and a member of Lyerly Bap
tist Church. Her husband,
Joseph Milton Jones, died in
1982, and a son, James Clark,
died in 1965.
Surviving are one sister,
Lena Willilxfiham, Marietta;
five grandchildren; nine great
grandchildren; three great
great-grandchildren; and
several nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held
at 1 p.m. Monday in the chapel
of Erwin-Petitt l'xuneral Home,
with the Rev. Tony Christie of
ficiating. Interment was in Oak
Hill Cemetery.
Pallbearers were grand
sons, nephews and Henry
Smith.
Dorothy Norton
Mrs. Dorothy “Det’’ Nor
ton, 65, Summerville Rte. 5,
died at home Wednesday
morning.
She was born in Walker
County Feb. 14, 1929,
daughter of the late Fred
Bryson and Vecil Hargraves
Bryson. She was a homemaker,
and was a member of the Four
Mile Baptist Church.
She is survived by her
widower, L. W. Norton, Sum
merville; a daughter and son-in
law, Jan and Bill Pickle,
Jasper; four grandchildren,
Lisa and Spencer Johnson,
Jasper, and Andy and Katrina
Pickle, Duluth; a great
granddaughter, Addie John
son, J asger; and several nieces
and nephews.
Funeral services were held
Friday at 11 a.m. at the J. D.
Hill Funeral Home Chapel with
the Rev. Waydell Howell of
ficiating. Interment was in
Summerville Cemetery.
Active B:llbearers were
Curtis Hawkins, Kelly Norton
Jr., Eddie Young, Ted
Youngblood, Gene Pickle and
Gordon Boyd.
Anna Tate
Anna Lou Wilder Tate, 76,
Mentone, Ala., died this past
Friday.
She was the daughter of the
late Robert Lee and Effie
FAMILY EYECARE CENTER
8 Georgia Ave. - Summerville » 857-4015
Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday
AREEEaY ... 98
TERY ... ..... coovicvivisaco el
DN . ... ..o
DR. W. M. PAYNE
DR. ERNEST L. BOWLING
Wilder, Jamestown, Ala.
She was the widow of
Joseph W. Tate who died on
Oct. 22, 1989. A sister, Ruby
Sully-Sully, died in October,
1993.
She was a member of
Cloudland Presbyterian
Church.
Survivors include a son and
daughter-in-law, Reggie and
Eleanor Tate, Mentone; two
daughters and sons-in-law,
Joanne and Larry C. Johnson,
Fort Payne, Ala., and Jonnie
Faye and George Benefield,
Mentone; eight frandchildren,
Mike, Jeff and Joey Poss, Jim,
Scott and Johnathan Tate,
Steve and Teri Campbell; a
great-grandchild, Chase Poss;
two sisters, Pearl Stanfield,
Chattanooga, Tenn., and Effie
Daniel, Arizona; and several
nieces and nephews.
Funeral services were held
Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Wilson
Funeral Home chapel, Fort
Payne, Ala., with &ee Revs.
Ron Johnson and Ronnie
Highfield officiatittg. Inter
ment was in the Cloudland
Presbyterian Church
Cemetery.
Active pallbearers were
grandsons. An honoralii'
Eallbearer was Ms. Campbell,
er only granddaughter.
Jail Meal
Bids Asked
Bids will be opened next
week on providing three meals
a day to inmates at the Chat
tooga County Jail.
ommissioner Jim Parker
will receive the bids until 10
a.m. Friday, March 4, in his
office.
Maxwell’s Restaurant,
Menlo, currently holds the con
tract on the meals at $7 per day
per inmate.
Contracts are awarded for
three months at a time. Winner
of the newest contract will
begin serving meals at the jail
on March 10.
Mower, Tank
Bids Sought
By Chattooga
Jim Parker, Chattooga
County’s sole commissioner, is
seeking bids on two side
mounted, hydraulically
powered 60-inch rotary
mowers.
Bids on the mowers will be
fi)ened at 10 a.m. Friday,
arch 4, in Parker’s office. The
mowers will be mounted on
county tractors to help keep
roadsides cut in the spring and
summer months, the commis
sioner said.
TANKS
The county is also seeking
bids on two 2,000-gallon fuel
storage tanks to be placed at
the county public works
department. Bids on those
tanks will be opened at the
same time as the mower
proposals.
Supply Bids
Asked Here
Bids are beinfi sought for a
variety of supp ies for Chat
tooga County’s government.
ommissioner Jim Parker
plans to open bids on cold
patch asphalt material, rock of
various sizes, concrete tile, cor
rugated steel drain tile, diesel
fuel, unleaded gasoline, tires
and tubes.
The bid opening has been
set for 10 a.m. Friday, March
4, in Parker’s office.
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910 Desoto Avenue
(BEHIND WESTERN SIZZLIN)
® Rome, Ga.
Phone (706) 291-9221
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Installation of a trunk sewer line to the new Chattooga
County Library building on Farrar Drive continued this
week. Six D Construction Co., Rockmart, holds the
$112,754 contract for the project, which will also offer
sewerage service to residents of the area. The line will
Farrar Charged Again
A Summerville man who
was arrested on charges of
burglarizing a local car dealer
ship has been hit with addi
tional counts in both Summer
ville and Rome.
Chief Tony Gilleland of the
Summerville Police Dgpart
ment said Charles C. “Cary”
Farrar, 35, North Congress
Street, Summerville, was
charged with criminal attempt
at burglary, and theft by
receiving stolen property.
Farrar was charged with
trying to break in the office of
Bill McClellan’s State Farm In
surance Co. office on North
Commerce Street, and with
possessing a i)rescription pad
stolen from a local doctor’s of
fice, Chief Gilleland said.
Those charges are in addi
tion to those filed in connection
with the Feb. 9 burglary of
Joseph Jackson Auto Sales,
315 N. Commerce St., Summer
ville. Farrar had already been
charged with burglary, enter
ing an auto and two felony
counts of violating the state’s
drug control laws.
BOTTLE
The chief said the discovery
of a bottle of prescription
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Summerville’s Number One Drug Value Genter
5 g °”'wj;§fi',:v“ T
Library Sewer Line
drugs from Farrar when he was
arrested on Feb. 9, and finding
a prescrilption gad at his
residence led to charges being
filed in Rome this East week.
Farrar was picked up by
Summerville police and turned
over to Rome lawmen Satur
day, Gilleland said. Farrar was
charged with two counts of try
ing to obtain dangerous drugs
with a for%:;: prescription and
ona good havior warrant in
Flo%" County.
arrar was charged with
allegedly threatening to kill his
ex-wife, Christy Johnson, and
her husband, on Haywood
Valley Road. Farrar and Mrs.
Johnson had been divorced
since September, 1993, Floyd
Counfir authorities reported.
Gilleland said Farrar was in
possession of a prescription
pad that had been stolen from
the office of Dr. Steven A.
Woghlemuth in Summerville.
Farrar’s first arrest this
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be installed north to Henry Creek from the library
building. Eventually, the line will also be connected to
a new county senior citizens center next to the library.
(Staff Photo).
month occurred after Joseph
Jackson drove by his business
and saw someone trying to
back a 1990 model white Cor-
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vette out of his building. Police
arrested Farrar a short time
later and charged him with be
ing involved in the incident.