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The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 2
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The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 2

Publication:
The Daily Timesi
Location:
Salisbury, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
2
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

2 THE DAILY TIMES Salisbury, Md. Sept. 10, 1985 rfflsrcwiiMiiitt i Mollle E. Joaeph LAUREL Funeral services are scheduled at 2 m. Wednosrlav Mary Edna Adams SALISBURY Funeral services will be held at 10 a.m.

Wednesday in the Dulaney Valley Home of the Lemmon-Mitchell-Wiedefeld Funeral Home, lmonium, for Mary Edna Adams, 3, of Baltimore. Mrs. Adams died unday in the Keswick Nursing lome in Baltimore of congestive Amling, Auburn, 14 grandchildren and six great "grandchildren. A son, Melvin Hearn, died in 1980. Friends may call at the Dodd-Carey Funeral Home here Wed-.

nesday evening. Contributions may be made In the memory of the deceased to Wesley United Methodist Church or to the American Legion Post 8 Ambulance Service, both Georgetown, Del. 19947. eart failure. A daughter, Alice oik Palumbo of Baltimore Born in Revere, she was a daughter of the late John William and Edith Warfield Soars.

She and her husband, Henry A. Boesch, who died in December, celebrated their 62nd anniversary in 1984. She was graduated from the Salem, Normal School and she was a former elementary school teacher in Ridgef ield, N.J. She was a member of the Polymathic Club of Rutherford, N.J., and the First Presbyterian Churches of Rutherford and Freehold. Surviving are a son, Robert H.

Boesch, Neptune, N.J.; a daughter, Madlyn B. Smith, Salisbury; 11 grandchildren; nine greatgrandchildren and a brother, Everett A. Soars, West Palm Beach, Fla. Arrangements are being handled by the Baker and Bounds Funeral Home in Salisbury. ormerly lived In Salisbury.

In the Windsor and Disharoon Funeral Home here for Mollie E. Joseph, 77, of Laurel, who retired in 1971 after 23 years as a seamstress with Laurel Manufacturing Co. She died at home Sunday of a heart attack. i The Rev. Paul Owens will officiate and interment will be in Bethel Cemetery.

-Born here, she was a daughter of the late James A. and Elizabeth Collins Neal. Her husband, Arthur Joseph, died in 1979. Surviving are a son, Robert L. Joseph, Laurel; 12 grandchildren; several great-grandchildren and a sister, Nellie Dorey, Laurel.

iniermem win De in tne altimore National Cemetery. Pauline F. Potts SILOAM Funeral services for Pauline F. Potts, 79, of Siloam, will be held at 10:30 a.m. Thursday In the Baker and Bounds Funeral Home in Salisbury.

She died Sunday In the Wicomico Nursing Home of a stroke. The Rev. Warren J. Ford will officiate and interment will be in Wicomico Memorial Park. Born in Siloam, she was a daughter of the late Charles H.

and Eleanor Fields Malone. Surviving are her husband, Ellis Potts; five children, Frances Wainwright, Bertie Potts, Siloam, Richard Potts, Arlain Potts, Princess Anne, and Carman Potts, Parsonsburg; nine grandchildren; several great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. A son, Bobby Potts, Siloam, died in 1946. Friends may call at the funeral home Thursday from 10 a.m. to 10:30 a.m.

Delawareans Earn More On Average WASHINGTON Delawareans earn more on the avergage than other Latest figures from the Commerce Department show Delaware's per capita income in 1984 was $13,685, up from $12,659 in 1983. Nationwide, the per capita average last year was $12,789. Dover 911 Board Hit By Lightning DOVER The Kent County 911 emergency call board here has been temporarily put out of service by lightning for the third time in two months. An emergency power supply had to be put into operation after a lightning bolt hit the Kent County courthouse. Lightning struck the call board antenna twice in July.

The director of the call board, Leroy Dear, had to be taken to Kent General Hospital after the hit. He suffered chest pains while manually operating an emergency generator, but was able to return to work after treatment. Lewes Building Moratorium Is Lifted LEWES Officials here have decided to end an 18-month moratorium on the construction of town houses and other multi-unit structures. Mayor Alfred A. Stango announced the lifting of the moratorium Mondav.

He said the Victor T. Bonneville POCOMOKE CITY Masonic graveside services will be held at 10 a.m. Wednesday in Salem United Methodist Cemetery here for Victor Thomas Bonneville, 87, of Pocomoke City, a World War I Army veteran. He died Saturday in the Hiram Davis Medical Center in Petersburg, of cancer. The Rev.

Richard Hughes and Pocomoke City's Lodge 178, AF and AM, will conduct the services. Born here, Bonneville was a son bf the late Henry Thomas and Elizabeth Jane Bennett Bonneville. His wife, Ruby Curling Bonneville, died Jn 1936. A daughter, Ruby Estelle Bonneville, died in 1935. He retired in 1961 after 25 years' employment with the War and Navy Departments.

Bonneville was a member of Pitts Creek Presbyterian Church here and Lodge 113, AF and AM, In Norfolk, Va. Surviving asre a nephew and two nieces. Arrangements are being handled by the Watson and Melson Funeral Home here. Eaale Maria Purcell POCOMOKE CITY Graveside services will be held today at 1 p.m. in Salem United Methodist Cemetery here for Essie Marie Purcell, 75, of Pocomoke City.

She died Sunday in Hartley Hall Nursing Home here of a stroke. The Rev. Thomas J. Wall will officiate. Born in Crisfield, she was a daughter of the late Cleveland and ManieDize Mister.

Surviving are a daughter, Mildred Frances Purcell, Kinsale, a sister, Kathleen Frances Bell, Shelltown, near here; three brothers, William, James and Cleveland Mister, all of Crisfield, and several nieces and nephews. Arrangements are being handled by the Watson and Melson Funeral Home here. Margaret Jackson SALISBURY Margaret L. Jackson, 80, a resident of the John B. Parsons Home and formerly of Schumaker Lane, died Monday in Peninsula General Hospital Medical Center of pneumonia.

Born in Norfolk, she was a daughter of the late William U. and Lula M. Carey Dixon. Her late husband was Edward Jackson. A late daughter was Margaret Mapes.

Surviving are three nieces. Graveside services will be held at 4 p.m. Wednesday in the Manokin Presbyterian Cemetery in Princess Anne with the Rev. Warren J. Ford officiating.

Contributions may be made in memory of the deceased to Coastal Hospice, P.O. Box 1733, Salisbury, Md. 21801. Arrangements are being handled by the Holloway Funeral Home. Born in Baltimore, she was a laughter of the late Floyd Brinsfield Vane and Lucy Vickers Vane.

Her husband, Herbert E. dams, died In 1959. Surviving in addition to Mrs. Palumbo are three other daughters, Bernice E. Greenwood, Baltimore, and Shirley A.

Gerhardt and Mary Louise Brown, Cockeysville; 10 grandchildren; 10 great-grandchildren and two Brothers, Russell R. iWoolford, and Floyd B. Vane jPatterson Creek, W.Va., and and sister, Ethel A. Strehlau, Baltimore. Friends may call at the funeral home today from 2 p.m.

to 4 p.m. and 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. Contributions may be made in the memory of the deceased to the Keswick Home, 700 West 40th Baltimore, Md. 21211.

Mary E. Good PITTSVILLE Mary Elizabeth Good, 72, of Pittsville, died Monday in Peninsula General Hospital Medical Center of heart failure. Born in Denton, she was a daughter of the late John Wesley and Linda Anthony Carlisle. Her husband, William C. Good, died in 1983.

Surviving are two daughters, Eleanor R. Shockley, Powellville, and Joan E. Aydelotte, Snow Hill; four grandchildren; one greatgrandchild; a brother, John Wesley Carlisle Wyoming, a sister, Emma Johnson, ilford, and several nieces and nephews. Graveside services will be held at 11 a.m. Thursday in Riverside Cemetery at Libertytown, near Berlin, with the Rev.

Leroy Smith officiating. Arrangements are being handled by the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin. Wallace F. Hearn GEORGETOWN Graveside services will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in Union Cemetery here for Wallace F.

Hearn, 84, of Georgetown, who died Sunday in the Harrison House Nursing Home of cardio-pulmonary arrest. He retired in 1960 from the Lewes Dairy. His wife, Sallie Givens Hearn, died in June. Surviving are four sons, W. Paul and Jack O.

Hearn, Georgetown, Lloyd W. Hearn, Wilmington, and James N. Hearn, Salisbury; two daughters, Janet H. King, Georgetown, and Jean H. Weather CARDOFTHAINKS We would like to lake this opportunity to thank our friends and relatives (or-their prayers, cards, flowers, phone calls, food and all other acts of kindness shown during the death our Mother, Arietta Ridnour.

May God Bless Each One Of You. Ernie Carbaugh and Family The Forecast for 8 a.m. EDT, Sept. 1 A mil i 1 a ii ii ii 1 1 ii 1 1 1 mm i i mm mi i i rar Helen S. Lankford PRINCESS ANNE Funeral services will be held at 11 a.m.

Wednesday in St. Andrew's Episcopal Church here for a member, Helen Sudler Maddox Lankford, 96, formerly of Princess Anne. She died Sunday in St. John's Nursing Home in Milwaukee, Wise, of heart failure. The Rev.

John E. Keene will officiate and interment will be in Manokin Presbyterian Cemetery. Born in Manokin, she was a daughter of the late George W. and Sallie Jane Sudler Maddox. Her husband, Benjamin Louis Lankford, died in 1954.

Surviving are a daughter, Helen Momsen, White Fish Bay, Wise; three grandchildren; seven great-grandchildren and several nieces and nephews. Arrangements are being handled by the. Hinman Funeral Home here. CARD OF THANKS We would like to thank everyone who made cakes or gave donations to our cake stand during the Hebron Fireman's Carnival. Your kind and generous support once again enabled us to have a successufl year.

Ladies Auxiliary Of The Hebron Fire Co. Marlon E. Boeach PRINCESS ANNE Graveside 3ervices will be held Thursday at 1 p.m. in Old Tennent Church Church Cemetery in Tennent, N. for Marion E.

Boesch, 85, of Princess Anne, formerly of Freehold, N.J. She died Sunday in Peninsula General Hospital Medical Center of a heart condition. decison is not expected to produce a building boom, however. The moratorium was imposed in March of 1984 when officials became concerned that a rash of multi-unit structures would overburden the municipal sewer plant. Stango predicted that the, imposition of an average fee of $2,400 per unit, designed to help pay for $4.6 million in improvements to the sewer system, would put a da mper on new construction Eastern Bypass Urged Around Dover DOVER City officials here will consider a recommendation that a Route 13 bypass be built on the eastern outskirts of the city.

A Philadelphia consultant firm has recommended the eastern bypass over several others being considered by the state. The consultants' report said the eastern bypass would require acquisition of property less desirable for agricultural and urban development purposes. It would also give the city more control over development along the bypass than some, of the other proposals, the report says. New Development Aide Is Selected DOVER The Delaware Development Office has a new assistant director of business development. He is Donald C.

Kane, 57, a retired executive of the Hercules Co. Kane succeeds David V. Brandon, who left Delaware in August to become head of the Texas Economic Development Commission. Kane's main role will be to try to attract new business and industry to Delaware. Kuhn's jewelers Selected By (T) As their exclusive Dealer on the Eastern Shore.

Showers Rain Flurries Snow Occluded Stationary Lower Delmarva Episcopalians To Select' Bishop Tonight, partly cloudy with a 40 percent chance of showers or muiiuei storms, lows to to o. winds Decoming north 10 to 15 mph. Wednesday, partly sunny becoming cooler and less humid. Highs 80 uj. nui mci ly WII1U5 IV III AJ llipn.

Marine Outlook Chesapeake Bay. South of Windmill Point- Southwest winds 10 to 15 knots tonight becoming north 10 to 20 knots Wednesday. Waves 1 to 3 feet building to 2 to 4 feet Wednesday. Chance of a thunderstorm, becoming more probable tonight and 09r WaHnnel'iir ITii. 1..

I 1 a viaiuijiij in iiaic lowering 10 poor in rain ana v-iccii mg iaier neunesaay wun good viSlDUlty. Cape Henlopen to Fenwick Island and Chlncnteami nut an mii. Southwest winds 10 to 15 knots shifting to north 10 to 20 knots during tonight. North winds 15 to 20 knots and gusty Wednesday. Waves 1 to icci, uunuiiig 10 1 hi ieei iaier tonigni ana Wednesday.

Scattered ouuncia ui muiiuci aiumis eany tonigni. ramy qiouay Wednesday. Extended Forecast Thursday through Saturday Vatican to elect a pope, except that the Episcopal prelates send out no smoke signal of an election. Both groups begin their work by celebrating Holy Communion, and go through successive secret ballots, interspersed by conversation, meditation and more prayer, until a choice is made. The church of about 3 million is part of the world-wide Anglican Communion totaling 70 million in 28 national branches.

The presiding bishop, defined as the church's "chief pastor and primate," is its main spiritual guide and administrator, but he exercises his general influence by persuasion rather than command. Church canons say he is to "speak God's word to the church and to the world as the representative of this church and its episcopate in its corporate capacity." Allin, a conciliatory Missfssip-plan, told the bishops Monday that the top bishop is sometimes called "the boss," but added, "There should be nothing bossy about this job." Sunny days and clear cool nights Highs averaging in the upper 60s the western portion of Maryland to the low 70s elsewhere. Lows 50 nve 10 ien degrees cooler in the Maryland mountains. Tomorrow's Tides Shore Highs Lows ANAHEIM, Calif. (AP) The selection of a new head for the 3 million-member Episcopal Church involves meditation, prayer and "quite heavy debate" among 300 ol the denomination's leaders, church officials say.

The 200-member House of Bishops, part of the church's bicameral legislature, were to be sequestered today in St. Michael's Church for balloting between the four candidates presiding bishop of the church considered a "bridge" between Roman Catholicism and Protestantism. The results of the secret choice by the House of Bishops, part of the church's bicameral legislature, will be sped by chauffered courier 2'4 miles to the Anaheim Convention Center. There, the House of Deputies, the other branch of the legislature which includes the lay and clergy representatives to the governing convention, would either concur in the choice or reject The 960-member House of Deputies has never rejected the House of Bishops' selection, but if it happened, the bishops would be asked to select another man for the 12-year term in the top office. "There could be a quite heavy debate on it," said Bishop Rustin R.

Kimsey of The Dalles, and one of the deputies. The nominees to succeed the Most Rev. John M. Allin include Bishops Edmond Lee Browning, 56, of Honolulu; William Carl Frey, 55, of Denver; Furman Charles Stough, 57, of Birmingham. and John Ocean City High Low :19a.m.

:35p.m. Rehoboth Beach High Low Til MARYLAND BALTIMORE (AP) these Maryland Lotteries were drawn Monday night: "Daily Lottery" Game 4-3-7. "Pick Four" Game 1-3-4-6. DELAWARE DOVER, Del. (AP) These Delaware Lotteries were drawn Monday night: "Daily Lottery" Game 6-6-5.

"Play Four" Game 1-7-3-7. DOVER High (9 Low 72 5:40 a.m. 11:36 a.m. 5:56 p.m. Midnight SEAFORD 1 High 91 CAMBRIDGE a Low 72 High 94 Low 72 Chincoteague Inlet High Low 25 a.m.

Midnieht OCEAN CITV SALISBURY HichK 12:21 p.m.! High 92 Low 75 La -S Tangier Light High Low RAYMATHEU good service Sff GOOD INSURANCE SMITH CROPPER AGENCY 732 S. Salisbury Blvd. Salisbury, M0 742-0100 Low 73' CRISFIELD High 19 Low 75 POCOMOKE High 93 Low 74' ACCOMAC High9S Low 74 Crisfield High Low Sjfc Th.li 18Kooldt Thomas Walker. 60. of let watch combines exr Washington, D.C., the first black lite Jewelry craffsmanshlD ti the intf in nominated for the top office.

Nanticoke Roaring Pt. High Low ine Disnops- initial secret pro You should hear what you're -missing. Sunset, today 7:15 p.m. Sunrise, tomorrow. rjr38a.m." Midnight 6:04 a.m.

cess somewhat resembles the closed conclave of cardinals at the Noon p.m. 6:00 p.m." Monday Dorchester General Hospital, Cambridge. Mr. and Mrs. Gary Dale Cheesman, East New Market, daughter.

Northampton -Accomack Memorial Hospital, Nassawadox. Mr. and Mrs. George Cline, Wat-tsville, son. Peninsula General Hospital Medical Center.

Mr. and Mrs. Mark DeBord, Delmar, Mr. and Mrs. Michael Owens, Salisbury, and Joel Schoolfield, Pocomoke City, daughters.

Sunday: Mr. and Mrs. George Walker, Laurel, daughter. The Daily Times fmnt ferroll S(rrt. Salisbury.

MD 21M1 POUNDf as the Wicomico News (weekly) tn May Bnqan dady publication The Salisbury Timet Dec 3, WJ The Daily Timet It published every day tl Times Square as Carroll Street, Box 1937. Salisbury Maryland Second Class postage patd al Elephant Falls On qua1imekeeps technology. A- examp of Baume vlercier'sawcilogfionto per ctionXJseartd4xirsare ataze wrh Bnesl Quality diamonds and linked to strands of woven gold, For women of obvious dlstinchon. Boum Mwr tfcpl nv10. 555 Ftftfi sork.NV 10017 ot 45 WiltfUr Hull.

CA 90212 ManlnEaston ASTON. Md. (AP) A 43-- year-old circus worker was in satisfactory condition at Memorial Hospital after being injured when an elephant lost its balance and fell on him while he was i cuttom-mada working, of ficials said. Harry Fried, an eleohant i comfortable, Inconipicuou, md tilt nllrtly within your Mr! BELTONE HEARING handler with the Hanneford Circus, was injured Monday when he tripped and fell Into a hole In the elephant pen while shoveling manure into the space to fill it up, Maryland State Police said. AID SERVICE rried's fall apparently Salisbury Maryland 21801.

PUBLICATION NUMBER USPS 1 46540 postmaster Send address changes to The Deity Times PO Bon 193. Salisbury, MO 21801, MfcMRfR ot the Associated Presa, American Newspaper Publishers Association, Maryland -Delaware -0 C. Press Association and Audit Bureau ot Circulation SUBSCRIPTION RATES By carrier pet week II 75; by mail for 12 months (91 00. (45 50 tor 8 months. 5 tor 3 months, payable tn advance No mail orders accepted Jocatitm served by carrier delivery All carriers, dealers and distributors are rndnpnndertl contractors keeping their own accounts tree from control.

therefor The OeHy Timet not responsible tor advance payments made to them. frightened Ina, the elephant, and the huge animal in turn triDDed GENEVE Available only at: ICulfitH Downtown Salisbury On The Plaza and felion Fried, police said. Man uiaios, the circus manag er, said Fried did not bear the 749-1003 116N. Ohrlsiori St. Salisbury, MD 21801 221-1675 UfJnum Bldj.

525 Poplar St. Cimbridgi, MD 21611 elephant's full weight when it fell. if ne naa. he wouidn i be here," Bialos said after the accident at the Talbot County Com irww agpnis or reparian is uvea COMMUNICATIONS intended for publication must bear the writer name and address No consideration wit be given anonymous letters THE NEWSPAPER cannot be responsiW tor sohciied photographs and manuscripts By Chinika Smith, Showell Elementary School munity center. The circus is Ckirlti i.

Ik1h, Jr. scheduled to open Thursday..

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Pages Available:
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Years Available:
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