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The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 12
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The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 12

Publication:
The Daily Timesi
Location:
Salisbury, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
12
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

WEATHER OBITUARIES Page 12 THE DAILY TIMES Salisbury, Md. Friday, October 13, 1995 Friday, Oct 13 Accu-Weather forecast for daytime conditions and high temperatures Call Times Info Line for local obituary listings: Code 1751 Cumberland 85" Hagerstown 86 Wilmington 82 "EL il ft 4n Ift 0- mm Yftcomko, Worcester, i Somerset Counties Baltimore 82 I Brh W.VA. Washington 82 I. y- Dover 81 1-600S23-6B96 all other callers I I 5 INFO LINE Vote inhirmalM HI A Mb. 1 if 4 Showers T-storms Rain Hurries it Sunset today: 6:26 p.m.

Sunrise Saturday: 7:07 a.m. TODAY: Mostly sunny. Highs around 80. TONIGHT: Increasing cloudiness. Lows around 60.

SATURDAY: Cloudy with rain likely. Highs in the low to mid-70s. SUNDAY: Chance of showers. Highs in the lower 70s. Lows in the 50s.

MONDAY: Chance of showers. Highs in the upper 60s. Lows in the lower 50s. TUESDAY: Partly cloudy and cool. Highs in the 60s.

Lows in the 40s. Feeding the hungry The Rev. V. Wayne Nicholson, a member of Our Brothers Keeper in Salisbury, foreground, and Clifton Savage unload more than 39,000 pounds of food to be used to feed the hungry in the area. The food was donated by Pat Robertson's Operation Blessing in Chesapeake, Va, which distributes donated food throughout the United States and Canada.

OBITUARIES DEATH NOTICES SUSIE MARGARET ALMASI, 71, of Berlin died Wednesday, Oct 11, 1995, at the Berlin Nursing Rehabilitation Center in Berlin of congestive heart failure. A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at the Watson Funeral Home at 211 Washington Street in Millsboro, where friends may call one hour prior to the service. Interment will be in Riverside Cemetery in Liber-tytown, Md. MARGUERITE BURKE HOLBROOK, 80, of Mt Vernon died Tuesday, Oct.

10, 1995, at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury of a heart attack. A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at St. Paul United Methodist Church in Mt Vemon, where friends may call from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Sunday and at 11:30 a.m.

the day of the service. Interment will be in St Paul Church Cemetery. Arrangements are being handled by Jolley Memorial Chapel in Salisbury. CHARLES H. JESTER, 73, of Laurel died Wednesday, Oct 11, 1995, at Johns Hopkins Hospital In Baltimore.

The cause of death is pending the results of an autopsy. A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at Short Funeral Home at 700 West Street in Laurel, where friends may call one hour prior to the service. Interment will be in Blades Cemetery in Blades. Memorial contributions may be made to Church of the Nazarene, 100 Walnut Laurel, Del.

19956. NELLIE AMANDA KENNERLY, 107, of Salisbury died Thursday, Oct 12, 1995, at the Salisbury Nursing Home of heart failure. A graveside service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Parsons Cemetery in Salisbury. Arrangements are being handled by the Zeller Funeral Home in Salisbury.

ANNA MAY BRYAN MARVEL, 82, of Seaford died Wednesday, Oct. 11, 1995, at her home of respiratory failure. A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m. Monday at Watson-Yates Funeral Home on Front and King streets in Seaford. Interment will be in Odd Fellows Cemetery in Seaford.

CHESAPEAKE BAY Today: East winds 10 knots. Waves 1 foot. Tonight South winds 10 knots. Waves 1 foot. CAPE HENLOPEN TO VIRGINIA BEACH Today: Variable winds 10 knots.

Waves 2 feet. Tonight South winds 10 to 15 knots. Waves 3 feet. Ocean City Inlet High Low High Low 11:52 a.m. 5:29 a.m.

4:08 a.m. 10:07 a.m. 11:59 p.m. 6:21 p.m. 4:30 p.m.

11:03 p.m. Chincoteague Crisfield High Low High Low 12:53 a.m. 6:39 a.m. 5:04 a.m. 12:10 a.m.

12:46 p.m. 5:26 p.m. 11:14 p.m. Port of Salisbury Nanticoke High Low High Low 7:35 a.m. 2:29 a.m.

6:14 a.m. 1:13 a.m. 7:57 p.m. 1:33 p.m. 6:36 p.m.

12:17 p.m. The AccuWeather forecast for noon, Friday, Oct. 13. 10 -0 Oa 10t 20 30 40 Band taparata high tamparatur zonal for tha day. Times Photo by Autumn Winterbottom 6m.

Saturday at Hinman Funeral ome in Princess Anne, where friends may call one hour prior to the service. The Rev. John Boda will officiate. Interment will be in Springhill Memory Gardens, near Hebron. Clarence Smith SELBYVILLE Clarence Smith, 74, of here and Elkin, N.C., died Wednesday, Oct.

11, 1995, at Beebe Memorial Hospital in Lewes from complications of injuries suffered in an automobile accident Sept. 30, 1995. Born in Pittsville, he was a son of the late McFadden Smith and Lucille Jones Smith. His first wife, Hilda Louise Lewis Smith, died in 1984, and a second wife, Virginia Bunting Smith, died in 1989. Smith retired as a supervisor in 1986 after many years with Showell Poultry company.

He was a member of the Selbyville Elks Lodge, Sussex County Farm Bureau. Surry County Farm Bureau in North Carolina and the AARP. He was an avid rabbit hunter and a card enthusiast. He is survived by four sons, Wayne Smith of Abingdon, Blaine Smith of Whaleyville, Barry Smith of Petaluma, and Bruce Smith of Willards; three daughters, Trudy Lewis of Berlin, Deborah Mitchell of Selbyville and Christine Stuller of Elkin, N.C.; five stepchildren, Wayne Bunting of Georgetown, Glen Bunting of Selbyville, Marian Bhate of Wilmington, Donna Coffin of Millsboro and Kathy Collins of Selbyville; five brothers, Dorsey "Bill" Smith, Clifford Smith and Everett Smith of Whaleyville, William Smith of Delmar and Howard Smith of Roxanna; 16 grandchildren; 10 stepgrandchildren; eight great-grandchildren and numerous nieces and nephews. Fourteen brothers and sisters are deceased.

A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin, where friends may call tonight from 7 to 8:30. The Rev. Berry McCready and the Rev. Odell Sisk will officiate.

Interment will be in Lewis Cemetery in Willards. Memorial contributions may be made to Little Richmond Baptist Church, 114 Industrial Road, Elkin, N.C. 28621. Correction The obituary of Melvin E. Smith, which appeared in the Wednesday edition of The Daily Times, incorrectly gave the name of his wife.

She is L. Isabelle Gunter Smith. The Daily Times does not charge for Death Notices, which are carried as a matter of public record. The more detailed Obituaries are prepared and submitted through the funeral director and paid for by the families of the deceased. FRONTS: COLD WARU STATIONARY I Accomac 78 Snow Ice Sunny Pt.

Cloudy Cloudy 1 Cambridge Crisfield Ocean City Rehoboth Beach Salisbury High 82Low 45 High 74Low 56 High 79Low 55 High 80Low 56 High 81Aow 46 Tangier Island SO 60 70 SO B0 100a 110 1895 AecuWaithar, Inc. of those who didn't start musical studies un .1 after the age of 13. What causes this dramatic shift at that moment in life, said Taub, "is still unknown, but it is very clear." Taub is co-author of a study of musical brains, which will be published today in Science, the journal of the American Association for the Advancement of Science. In the study, researchers concentrated on a part of the brain cortex that detects sensory signals. Taub said specific and known parts of this brain structure receive signals from the fingers, the face and the torso.

Sensations from the left side are detected on the right side of the brain and those from the right are reflected in the left side. This enables a direct comparison. DISPLAY ADVERTISING DEADLINES (DEADLINES DO NOT APPLY TO HOLIDAYS) Monday Thursday at 5 p.m. at 12 p.m. Wednesday Friday at 5 p.m.

Thursday Monday at p.m. Delmarva Home Friday -Thursday at 1 p.m. Tuesday at 5 p.m. Friday Weekend at 10 a.m. Saturday Wednesday at 11 a.m.

Sunday Wednesday at 5 p.m. Sunday Style Tuesday at 5 p.m. She is survived by eight cousins, Ruth I. Hitchens and Cathy Hurley, both of Seaford, Irene Elliott of Del-mar, George Isaacs of Georgetown, Jake Hearn of Milton, Sandra Temple of Hagerstown, Elaine McCahn of Germantown, N.J., and Granville Hearn of North Carolina. A funeral service will be held at 2 p.m.

Monday at Watson-Yates Funeral Home on Front and King streets in Seaford. The Rev. Karl Jones will officiate. Interment will be in Odd Fellows Cemetery in Seaford. Memorial contributions may be made to The Order of the Eastern Star Chapter 7, Seaford Library and Seaford Soroptimist Club, Seaford, Del.

19973. Nellie A. Kennerly SALISBURY Nellie Amanda Kennerly, 107, of here died Thursday, Oct. 12, 1995, at the Salisbury Nursing Home of heart failure. Born in Parsonsburg, she was a daughter of the late Hilary Bailey and Mary Parsons Bailey of Parsonsburg.

For many years, she had worked as an Avon representative and also for the R.E. Powell Co. in Salisbury, She is survived by two grandchildren, Sandra Polk Frazier of Potomac, and Patricia Polk Simpson of Charlottesville, a niece, Ada Mae Morris of Melson, two nephews, Elwood Bailey of Salisbury and George Williams of Pittsville; and several great-grand- children. A daughter, Mary Elizabeth Kennerly, is deceased. A graveside service will be held at 11 a.m.

Saturday at the Parsons Cemetery in Salisbury. Arrangements are being handled by the Zeller Funeral Home in Salisbury. Alma G. Hadnot Miller PRINCESS ANNE Alma Grace Hadnot Miller, 83, of here died Wednesday, Oct. 11, 1995, at Manokin Manor Nursing Home in Princess Anne of heart failure.

Born in Jacksonville, N.C., she was a daughter of the late Cyrus Fields Hadnot and Effie Morton Hadnot. Her husband, James Arthur Miller, died in 1971. She retired in 1978 after working as a nursing assistant at Peninsula Regional Medical Center for 17 years. She attended Asbury United Methodist Church in Mt. Vernon and was a member of Chapter 52 O.E.S.

South Norfolk. She is survived by two daughters and sons-in-law, Betty and Marvin Tyrell of Delmar and Alice and Harry Abbott of Deal Island; one son and daughter-in-law, James A. and Carolyn Miller of Salisbury; one brother, Albert Hadnot of Pine Level, N.C.; two sisters, Sarah Bullock of Wilson, N.C., and Lila Bell Shannon of Raleigh, N.C.; two close friends, Grace Fleming and Daisy Chesser; eight grandchildren; one great-grandchild; and several nieces and nephews. A funeral service will be held at 1 Marguerite B. Holbrook MT.

VERNON Marguerite Burke Holbrook, 80, of here died Tuesday, Oct. 10, 1995, at Peninsula Regional Medical Center in Salisbury of a heart at-tack. Born in Mt. Vernon and raised in Baltimore, she was a daughter of the late William J.H. and Lullah V.

Mitchell Burke. Her husband, Ren-dle H. Holbrook, died in 1966. She was a member of St. Paul United Methodist Church in Mt.

Vernon and the Somerset County Civic Association. She is survived by three sons; Calvin L. Holbrook Sr. of Mt. Vernon, Alvin K.

Holbrook of Oklahoma City, and Wendell P. Holbrook of Jersey City, N.J.; one brother, James Burke of Salisbury; one sister, Edna Burke Pitts of Philadel- Ehia; one daughter-in-law, Thelma olbrook; one son-in-law, Francois Deliotte: two brothers-in-law, Daniel Holbrook and Thomas Pitts; five sis-i ters-in-law, Elva Handy, Rosemary Gillette, Elsie McKinney, Frances Burke and Virginia Burke; 13 grandchildren; and 19 great-grandchildren. A daughter, Martharita Deliotte, died in 1988. A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Monday at St.

Paul United Methodist Church in Mt. Vernon, where friends may call from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Sunday and at 11:30 a.m. the day of the service. Interment will be in St.

Paul Church Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, memorial contributions may be made to the National Kidney Foundation of Maryland. Arrangements are beiig handled by Jolley Memorial Chapel in Salisbury. Anna M. Bryan Marvel SEAFORD Anna May Bryan Marvel, 82, of here died Wednesday, Oct.

11, 1995, at her home of respiratory failure. Born in Seaford, she was a daughter of the late Frank W. and Mary Rebecca Isaacs Bryan. Her husband, Dallas Edward Marvel, died in 1982. She was manager of the first Sears catalog store in Seaford in the 1950s and later went to work for the State of Delaware overseeing foster homes.

Marvel was a graduate of Drexel Institute' of Technology, now Drexel University in Philadelphia. She was a member of St. John's United Methodist Church, a charter member and first president of the Seaford Soroptimist Club and past worthy matron of The Order of the Eastern Star Chapter 7. She was also a member of the Seaford Volunteer Fire Department Ladies Auxiliary, trustee and treasurer of the Seaford Library Association for many years and was the first woman to serve on the Seaford City Council. Marvel was also recognized as an authority on the history of Seaford.

HIGH LOW SHOWERS RAIN T-STORMS FLURRICS SNOW ICS SUNNY PT. CLOUDY CLOUDY PI WEATHER UPME i jJSSCSS LINE CalUntoLtne tor ffw latest weather updated Outside Local Area Study finds music training imprints circuits of brain ALMA GRACE HADNOT MILLER, 83, of Princess Anne died Wednesday, Oct. 11, 1995, at Manokin Manor Nursing Home In Princess Anne of heart failure. A funeral service will be held at 1 p.m. Saturday at Hinman Funeral Home in Princess Anne, where friends may call one hour prior to the service.

Interment will be in Springhill Memory Gardens, near Hebron. CLARENCE SMITH, 74, of Selbyville and Elkin, N.C., died Wednesday, Oct. 11, 1995, at Beebe Memorial Hospital in Lewes from complications of injuries suffered in an automobile accident Sept 30, 1995. A funeral service will be held at 11 a.m. Saturday at the Burbage Funeral Home in Berlin, where friends may call tonight from 7 to 8:30.

Interment will be in Lewis Cemetery in Willards. ELSEWHERE Gertrude Hooper, field hockey president C0HASSET, Mass. (AP) Gertrude Hooper, former president of the United States Field Hockey Association and vice president of the International Federation of Women's Hockey Association, died Sunday. She was 91. Hooper was also a founder of the Friends of Prisoners, which became part of the United Prison Association, now the Crime and Justice Foundation.

Harry Hurwitz, independent filmmaker ANGELES (AP) Harry Hurwitz, an independent filmmaker and director of the 1971 cult film "The Projectionist," died Sept. 21 of heart failure. He was 57. "The Projectionist" starred Chuck McCann as a movie projectionist who lived a dream life as the amazing Captain Flash and featured then-unknown Rodney Dangerfield as a theater owner. His other films included "The Eternal Tramp," The Comeback Trail," "Safari 300," The Rosebud Beach Hotel" and "Fleshtone." He co-directed "Richard" in 1972, a musical spoof of then-President Richard M.

Nixon. Thomas B. Summers, NASA researcher CLEVELAND (AP) Thomas B. Summers, a retired NASA technology researcher whose work included studies on jet engines and space hardware, died of a heart attack Friday. He was 63.

Summers' research at NASA was applied to Apollo moon flights and to space station development. He is credited with invention of a clock that kept time to one-thousandth of a second. By PAUL RECER AP Science Writer WASHINGTON To become a violin virtuoso, you have to start practicing by the age of 12. Thirteen is too late, say scientists who have studied the brains of musicians. Edward Taub of the University of Alabama, Birmingham, said magnetic images of the brains of people who play stringed instruments show that larger and more complex neuron circuits form in violinists who started their training at an early age than among those who began later in life.

"There is an abrupt change at between ages 12 and 13 that appears to be quite dramatic," said Taub. Violinists who started studies between ages 3 and 12 showed no significant differences in the brain circuitry. But there was a distinctly reduced level of development, said Taub, in the brains 'Capture the Memorygfc Quality Lamination Now Available Obituaries, Wedolngs Engagements. THE DAILY TIMES Mon -Fri. 8am-5pm East Carroll St Four out of five drivers don't allow smoking in cars By MIKE McKESSON AP Auto Writer first mass-market vehicles since the 1930s without standard ashtrays.

"I figured for many years that people were using ashtrays for other purposes," said Tom Moulson, a senior vice president at Market Opinion Research, which released a survey Thursday on smoking and cars. The Farmington Hills company found that 78 percent of drivers said they never smoke in the car. Five percent smoke on some trips, while 17 percent almost always light up. Eighty percent said they don't let passengers smoke. DETROIT Four out of five American drivers don't smoke in the car or let their passengers light up.

Is it any wonder Detroit is moving increasingly toward making the "ash receiver" optional equipment? Chrysler Corp. made a splash at an auto show last year by introducing new cars without ashtrays or cigarette lighters apparently the.

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