Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archiveArchive Home
The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 8
A Publisher Extra® Newspaper

The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 8

Publication:
The Daily Timesi
Location:
Salisbury, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
8
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEATHER Page 8 THE DAILY TIMES Salisbury, Md. Saturday, July 3, 1993 The Accu-Weather forecast for npon, Saturday, July 3. Tgt I i T.i .1 -iim' 1 1 1 1 i- -10s Bands Southern Delmarva Today: Chance of evening thunderstorms. Highs around 90. Tonight: Partly cloudy.

Lows in the lower 70s. Sunday: Hazy. Highs in the lower to mid-90s. Today's sunset: 8:26 p.m. Sunday's sunrise: 5:43 a.m.

Extended forecast Monday through Wednesday Continued hazy, hot and humid all three days. Lows in the 70s and highs in the 90s. Marine outlook Chesapeake Bay Today: South winds 10 knots. Waves 1 foot Tonight: Variable winds 10 knots. Waves 1 foot.

Cape Henlopen to Virginia Beach out 20 miles Today: Southwest winds 10 knots. Seas 2 feet. Tonight: Variable winds 10 knots. Seas 2 feet. Saturday, July 3 Accu-Weather forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures FRONTS: "ft i Wilmington87a i PA.

1 1 i 1 1 i 90 I HagerstownjQI0 COLD WARM STATIONARY jBaitimore 90 A Cumberland W.VA. Washington Pressure 0 HIGH LOW SHOWERS RAIN U.S. Temps CharlottNf. 81 66 86 Friday WLto. Cheyenne Chicago Cincinnati Cleveland Columbia3-C ConcordpN.H.

DaUas-Ft Worth Dayton Yesterday's HighsLows Salisbury Accomac Crisfield Ocean City Seaford TIDES For Sunday, July 4 Ocean City High Low 8:20 a.m. 2:24 a.m. 8:37 p.m. 2:30 p.m. Chincoteague High Low 9:26 a.m.

3:30 a.m. 9:43 p.m. 3:36 p.m. Port of Salisbury Wicomico River High Low 3:23 a.m. 9:10 a.m.

3:06 p.m. 9:16 p.m. Tangier Island High Low 1:24 a.m. 7:06 a.m. 1:04 p.m.

7:04 p.m. Crisfield High Low 2:20 a.m. 8:02 a.m. 2 p.m. 8 p.m.

Nanticoke High Low 3:30 a.m. 9:12 a.m. 3:10 p.m. 9:10 p.m. DEATH NOTICES HARRISON G.

BARKLEY, 39, of Washington, died at Howard University Hospital in Washington of cardiac arrest. A funeral service will be held Monday at 11 a.m. at St. James AME Zion Church on Mack Avenue in Salisbury, where friends may call one hour prior to the service. Friends may also call Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m.

at Clinton F. Stewart Funeral Home on West Road and Olivia Street in Salisbury. Interment will be in Springhill Memory Gardens, near Hebron. EARL THOMAS BECKETT, 69, died Tuesday, June 29, 1993, at his home on Riverside Drive la Salisbury, of cardiac arrest. A funeral service will be held Saturday at 2 p.m.

at St James AME Zion Church on Mack Avenue in Salisbury, where friends may call after 11 a.m. Interment will be Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Maryland Veterans Cemetery in Beulah, near Hurlock. MAURICE E. C0RBETT, 93, of We-nona, died Thursday, July 1, 1993, at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury of pneumonia.

A graveside service will be held at Tmpers turns Amy'ttogk and AHmhtJJ.Y. Albuquerque Amardlo Ancbong. AUaaU Atlantic City Austin Baltinor. BUnuxck BoiM Boston. Brownsville Buffalo Casper Indicate ovnrnlfht low to 8 Hi LttPrc Otlk 8S 58 71 1 87 67 SS 71 80 1 71 76 6 TT 70 74 47 1.70 83 65 71 66 77 ody fSl cay edy ody edy Detroit DvUuth El Paso Fairbanks Farm FUfsUrY Grand Great FUa Greonbore.C.

Hartford edy 81 66 j04 edy Helena coy 81 60 86 4 Honoluhi Honeton edy 7 71 61 gujrfld 86 NV Showers T-storms Rain Flurries Show Icq Sunny Pt. Cloudy Cloudy the day. 1993 Accu-Weather, Inc. SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY 57 edy 61 edy 71 .01 ody 67 edy 64 dr 71 edy 60 elr 77 edy 68 edy 76 edy 66 edy 64 elr 76 edjr 81 edy 66 edy 71 clr 68 jM edy 66 edy 61 .10 edy 71 .08 ody 68 .78 elr 81 edy 76 elr 71 .06 edy 69 .03 choc edy 1.06 elr Tantpa-StPtrsbg 81 Topeka 88 Tucson 105 Tulsa 80 Waahington4.

77 Wichita 80 WilminftonJW. 84 edy edy edy .48 edy OBITUARIES by Hinman Funeral Home in Princess Anne. Ruth A. Whitelock CAMBRIDGE Ruth Anne Whitelock, 64, of Skipjack Drive, near here, died Friday, July 2, 1993, at Dorchester General Hospital in Cambridge of a stroke. Born in Cambridge, she was a daughter of Oliver H.

Whitten of Cambridge and the late Pauline Henry Whitten. Her husband, James Joseph Whitelock, whom she married in September 1967, died in December 1985. Whitelock was raised in Cambridge and was a 1948 graduate of Cambridge High School. She was employed in the catalog office of the Sears store in Cambridge, later employed by Richard Doty and was a sales representative for Avon. She is survived by two sons, W.

Harold Robinson III and Richard Daniel Cannon, both of Cambridge; four grandchildren, Brian Robinson, Brent Robinson, Chris Robinson and Kristin Danielle Cannon; a sister, Pauline Robinson of Toddville; three brothers, Robert 0. Whitten, Donald R. Whitten and Theodore W. Whitten, all of Cambridge; and several nieces and nephews. A funeral service will be held at Thomas Funeral Home on Locust Street in Cambridge Sunday at 3:30 p.m.

Interment will be in Maryland Veterans Cemetery in Beulah, near Hurlock, Tuesday at 2 p.m. The Rev. William George will officiate. There will be no viewing. Robert C.

Pennewell BERLIN Robert C. Pennewell, 80, of here, died Friday, July 2, 1993, at Berlin Nursing Rehabilitation Center of heart failure. Born in Sinepuxent, near Berlin, he was a son of the late Purnell- w-Martin PennewelK and Evie Belli Gray His wife, Irene H.I i Pennewell, died in! 1988' 1 He is survived by two daughters, Bobby Jean Pennewell Smith and Becky Ann Pennewell Jones, both of Berlin; two grandchildren, Bobby Elliott and Sandra Elliott Flurer; two great-grandchildren, Robbie Elliott and Matthew Flurer; JU clr 71 edy Providenee 81 edy Rsleisfa-Durhs 87 rn RapidClty 77 1.16 edy Reno 88 clr Riehssond 81 edy Sacramvanla 88 edy St Louis 64 ody Bait Lake City 86 edy Ban Antonio 81 clr Ban Diego 71 edy San Francisco 81 rn SanJuanJML 88 .06 Santa Fe 84 clr Seattle 88 elr Shreveport 81 edy Sioux Fails 76 edv Spokane 74 .07 edy Syracuse 88 .76 separate high temperature zones for 0 IS T-STORMS FLURRIES SNOW ICE 76 edy 67 edy 71 edy 60 edy 61 edy 70 edy 67 edy 71 .76 edy 6 186 edy Indlanapolta Jacksonville Juneau Kansas City Us Verms Little Rock Los Angeles Louisville Lubbock Memphle Miami Beach Milwaukee Mpls-StPaul Nashville New Orleans New York City Norfoik-Va. North Platte Oklahoma City Omaha' Orlando Philadelphia Phoenix Pittsburgh PortlandiMalne 81 64 61 71 4 70 tt 61 86 68 108 81 81 84 84 68 61 71 88 71 81 76 81 60 40 71 edy 68 1.71 edy edy 68 clr 68 61 71 61 66 61 .76 71 68 edy rn edy edy rn edy edy edy rn clr edy 81 76 84 71 81 86 84 74 84 66 88 71 78 66 85 71 88 68 106 81 78 67 78 48 if 81 7 8 88 Dies 71 66 61 67 47 71 61 61 71 77 79 8 88 Harrison G. Barkley SALISBURY Harrison G.

Barkley, 39, of Washington, died at Howard University Hospital in Washington of cardiac arrest. Born in Salisbury, he was a son of Helena J. Barkley of Salisbury and! the late Harrison I Watkins. Barkley was employed at Howard University Hospital for the past 17 years. Besides his mother, heSs- survived by- his maternal grandmother, Renager G.

Dutton of Salisbury; seven sisters, Veronica V. Barkley of Washington, Maria J. Sinclair of Fort Knox, Lenora A. Johnson, Renee Stevenson and Hilda G. Barkley, all of Salisbury, Charlene L.

Barkley of St. Michaels, Joanne Owens of Albemarle, N.C.; two aunts and five uncles: and several nieces and nephews. A funeral service will be held Monday at 11 a.m. at St. James AME Zion Church on Mack Avenue in Salisbury, where friends may call one hour i prior to the service.

Friends may call also Sunday from 7 to 9 p.m. at Clinton F. Stewart Funeral Home on West Road and Olivia Street in Salisbury. The Rev. Dr.

Charles H. Mack will officiate. Interment will be ji Springhill Memory Gardens, near Hebron. Maurice E. Corbett WENONA Maurice E.

Corbett, 93, of here, died Thursday, July 1, 1993, at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury of pneumonia. He was born in Wenona, a son of the late William J. and Sallie A. Phillips Corbet! Corbett retired from the state of Maryland fpfter near 30 years of service asmate of the Maryland Lady, the governor's yacht. He is survived by his sister, Lucy Hoffman Princess Anne; and several nieceand nephews.

A sister, Etta Richardson, and a brother, William Crockett, are deceased. graveside service will be held at St. Paul's United Methodist Church in Wenona Monday at 11 a.m. The Rev. Richard Vance will officiate.

Arrangements are being bandied Actor Fred 1 DEATHS ELSEWHERE and a sister, Elizabeth McCrosson of Salisbury. A sister, Mildred Beauvais of Berlin, died in 1956; and a brother, Franklin Pennewell, died in 1934. Pennewell was the co-owner and operator, along with his wife, of the Minit Market in Ocean City, the Ocean City Poultry and Egg Co. and Idle Hour Cocktail Lounge in Whaleysville. He was a member of the Salisbury Moose Lodge and the Selbyville Elks.

A funeral service will be held Monday at 11 a.m. at Burbage Funeral Home on Williams Street in Berlin, where friends may call one hour prior to the service. The Rev. Patti Collett will officiate. Entombment will follow in Evergreen Cemetery in Berlin.

Contributions may be made in memory of the deceased to either the Worcester County Humane Society, PO Box 48, Berlin, Md. 21811; or the Berlin Volunteer Fire Company, 214 N. Main Berlin, Md. 21811. Earl T.

Beckett SALISBURY Earl Thomas Beckett, 69, died Tuesday, June 29, 1993, at his home on Riverside Drive here of cardiac arrest He was born in Maryland, a son of the late Earl Beckett Sr. and Verline Satchell Beckett. His wife, Sadie Mae Beckett, died in 1973. Beckett was a World War Army veteran and retired in 1983 from E.S. Adkins Co.

after 31 years of service. He was a member of St James AME Zion Church in Salisbury, and its male chorus and steward board. Survivors include one daughter, Cheryl Brown of Mardela Springs; one son, Douglas Beckett of Louisiana; seven grandchildren; one greatgrandchild; one son-in-law, Anthony Brown and several nieces and nephews. Two children, Ronald Beckett and Patricia Farrington, are deceased. A funeral service will be held Saturday at 2 p.m.

at St. James AME Zion Church on Mack Avenue in Salisbury, where friends may call after 11 a.m. Interment will be Tuesday at 10 a.m. at Maryland Veterans Cemetery in Beulah, near Hurlock. The Rev.

Dr. Charles H. Mack will officiate. Winfred C. Lynch SELBYVILLE Winfred Clarence Lynch, 68, of here, died Thursday, July 1, 1993, at Atlantic Accomac 91 General Hospital in Berlin of a heart attack.

Born in Selbyville, he was a son of Mildred Bunting Lynch of Selbyville and the late Charles Lynch. In addition to his mother, he is survived by his wife, Maxine Der- rickson Lynch of Selbyville; one son, Terry Winfred Lynch of Bishopville; three grandchidlren; three brothers, Preston Lynch of Roxana, Clifton Lynch of Dagsboro and Milton Lynch of Philadelphia; and several meces and nephews. Lynch was employed with J. Conn Scott Furniture Co. in Selbyville for 44 years, working in sales.

He was a member of Sound Methodist Church. He was a World War II Navy veteran and a member of the Selbyville American Legion. A memorial service will be held today at 1 p.m. at Burbage Funeral Home on Williams Street in Berlin. Contributions may be made in memory of the deceased to American Heart Association, 800 E.

Main St, Salisbury, Md. 21801. BIRTHS Thursday July 1, 1993 Beebe Medical Center, Lewes. Brian and Heather Youse, Millsboro, son; and Debbie Franklin, Dagsboro, daughter. Milford Memorial Hospital.

Kim and Eric Heish-man, Lincoln, daughter. Nanticoke Memorial Hospital, Seaford. William and Kimberly Robertson, son; and Wayne and Carol Hutchinson, Bridgeville, daughter. Peninsula Regional Medical Center, Salisbury. Evelyn McMahon, Selbyville, son.

Capture the -jiS Quality Lamination Now Available Obituaries, Weddings Engagements. Single column $2, double to 84x14 $5. THE DAILY TIMES Mon -Frt Bam-5pm East Carrol, St. DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINES (DEADLINKS DO NUT APPLY TO HOLIDAYS) Monday Thursday at 5 p.m. Tuesday Friday at 12 p.m.

Wednesday Friday at 5 p.m. Thursday Monday at 5 p.m. Delmarva Home- at 1 p.m. -Tuesday at 5 p.m, Friday Weekend Monday at 10 a.m. Saturday Wednesday at II a.m.

Sunday Wednesday at 5 p.m. Sunday Style Tuesday at 5 p.m. 4mh i' St. Pauls United Methodist Church in Wenona Monday at 11 a.m. i Arrangements are being handled by Hinman Funeral Home in Princess Anne.

WINFRED CLARENCE LYNCH, 68, of Selbyville, died Thursday, July 1, 1993, at Atlantic General Hospital in Berlin of a heart attack. A memorial service will be held today at 1 p.m. at Burbage Funeral Home on Williams Street in Berlin. ROBERT C. PEN NEWELL, 80, of Berlin, died Friday, July 2, 1993, at Berlin Nursing Rehabilitation Center of heart failure.

A funeral service will be held Monday at 11 a.m. at 3urbage Funeral Home on Williams Street in Berlin, where friends may call one hour prior to the service. Entombment will follow in Evergreen Cemetery in Berlin. RUTH ANNE WHITELOCK, 64, of Skipjack Drive, near Cambridge, died Friday, July 2, 1993, at Dorchester General Hospital in Cambridge of a stroke. A funeral service will be held at Thomas Funeral Home on Locust Street in Cambridge Sunday at 3:30 p.m.

Interment will be in Maryland Veterans Cemetery in Beulah, near Hurlock, Tuesday at 2 p.m. There will be no viewing. In the 1940s Romero became a messenger at RKO Pictures and eventually moved up to music editor. In the mid-1950s he moved to Revue Productions, which Universal Pictures later bought. For Universal, he was music editor or supervisor for TV series such as "Alfred Hitchcock Presents," "The Jane Wyman Show" and "Wagon Train." Margo Su, dancer, choreographer MEXICO CITY (AP) Margo Su, a dancer, choreographer and theater owner, died of lung cancer at age 65.

Born Margarita Su Lopez, she used Margo Su as a stage name. She appeared in the popular Follies, Colonial and Lirico theaters in Mexico City before taking over the Teatro Blanquita, where many famous burlesque stars got their start. Paul Thiry World's Fair architect SEATTLE (AP) Architect Paul Albert Thiry the principal ar-' chitect of the 1962 Seattle World's Fair, died of pneumonia Sunday. He was 88. In the 1960s, he served as vice chairman of the Capital Planning Commission in Washington, D.G., and helped design the master plans for Pennsylvania Avenue.

Dr. Harry Wallerstein. saved newborn babies PORT CHESTER, N.Y. (AP) -Dr. Harvey Wallerstein, who designed an innovative type of blood transfusion that saved countless newborn babies, died of congestive heart failure Saturday.

He was 87. Wallerstein performed the first exchange transfusion with Dr. Walter Levy in 1945. The procedure replaces the blood of newborns who could not otherwise survive because their parents' blood is Rh incompati- Wallerstein's procedure almost totally eliminated infant deaths due to Rh-incompatible parents. The technique now is routinely used in the United States and abroad.

He also was an authority on leukemia and an early champion of the battle to establish blood banks in the 1930s. Robert Currie, interior designer NEW YORK (AP) Robert Currie, an interior designer who worked for some of fashion's leading names, died Wednesday of AIDS. He was 45. Currie designed trend-setting interiors for commercial and residential clients as well as sets for print and television advertising. His clients included Yves St.

Laurent, Calvin Klein, Giorgio Armani and Gianni Versace. Sir Edward Dunlop, saved lives of POWs MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) Sir Edward "Weary" Dunlop, a former army doctor who saved the lives of hundreds of Australian POWs ill treated by the Japanese in World War II, died of a stroke Friday. He was 85. Dunlop was revered for his untiring efforts to ease the suffering of Australian and other prisoners of war forced by Japanese troops to build the infamous Burma-Thailand railroad. After the war he worked to better the plight of returning POWs and their families as well as underprivileged people in Asia especially in Thailand, Sri Lanka and Dunlop also served as an army surgeon in Vietnam in the late 1960s.

Peggy A. Landry. TV general manager KEARNEY, Neb. (AP) Peggy A. Landry, the general manager of television network NTV, died of liver cancer Wednesday.

She was 42. Landry became general manager of NTV four years ago. The NTV network, an ABC affiliate, serves central Nebraska through three stations, KHGI in Axtell, KSNB in Superior and KWNB in Hayes Center. Gwynne dead at 66 BALTIMORE (AP) Actor Fred Gwynne, whose Lincolnesque physique, dour look and deep voice delighted audiences of television's "Car 54, Where Are You?" and "The Munsters," died Friday. He was 66.

Gwynne, who most recently appeared as the Southern judge in the movie "My Cousin Vinny," died at his home of complications of pancreatic cancer, said Roger Haber, an attorney representing the family. His home is near Taneytown, 40 miles northwest of here. Gwynne began his career with the Broadway production of "Mrs. McThing" with Helen Hayes in 1952 and he went on to alternate among stage, screen and television for the next 40 years. Plays in which he performed were "Love's Labours Lost," a revival of "Cat On a Hot Tin Roof," "Texas Trilogy," "Our Town" and "Hamlet" He won an Obie award, the off-Broadway equivalent of a Tony award, in 1979 for "Grand Magic." He last appeared on Broadway in "Whodunnit" in 1983.

In his long and varied career, he also wrote and illustrated children's books and did voices for commercials. From 1961 to 1963, he played Officer Francis Muldoon in "Car 54, Where Are You as one of a mismatched pair of New York City cops. The following year, Gwynne took up the role of Herman Minister in "The Munsters playing a comic Frankenstein's monster in the popular CBS series whose two-year run was almost simultaneous with "The Addams Family" on ABC. Herman Munster was the patriarch of a loveab-ly scary family that lived in a cobwebbed mansion. Gwynne wore green makeup and special boots to increase his 6-foot, 5-inch height to an even more stratospheric level.

Among his children's books were The Story of Ick, 1971; A Chocolate Moose for Dinner, 1976; and A Little Pigeon Toad, 1988. Frederick Hubbard Gwynne was born July 10, 1926, in New York City, the son of a stockbroker. He served in the U.S. Navy during World War and attended Harvard University. Funeral services will be private.

sales and administration in Missou- South Dakota, Vermont and Nebraska. Joseph E. Romero, worked on TV shows LOS ANGELES (AP) Joseph E. Romero, who worked as a music supervisor and editor on hundreds of television shows, died June 24 of bronchial pneumonia. He was 73..

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

Publisher Extra® Newspapers

  • Exclusive licensed content from premium publishers like the The Daily Times
  • Archives through last month
  • Continually updated

About The Daily Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,021,971
Years Available:
1923-2024