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The Morning News from Wilmington, Delaware • Page 46

Publication:
The Morning Newsi
Location:
Wilmington, Delaware
Issue Date:
Page:
46
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

The Morning News, Wilmington, IN MEMORIAM Sadie MOWER in levine memory our aunt, Mower, who passed away 14 years age, Octeber 15, Sadly missed by niece Madeline Jones and Family. CARD OF THANKS CAULK The family of Sarah T. Caulk, wishes to thank relatives, friends and neighbors for their flowers, contributions and cards. The sympathy and kindness shown during our recent bereavement is deeply appreciated. The Caulk Smith Familles.

STUART The family' of Guy H. Stuart wish to thank relatives friends, for their kindness sympathy in our recent reavement. Marie, Guy Terry. Deaths Deaths clock. Interment at adjoining cemetery.

Friends may call at the Chanel 1 hour prior to service. Please omit flowers. Arrangements THE FUNERAL HOME. CROTHERS At his residence, 202 Parkway, Elkten, on October 13, 1975. Raiph husband of Ethel R.

Crothers, father of Phyllis Jean Crothers of Catonsville, brother of General J. Alex Crothers of Wilmineten, and Mrs. Harvey A. Ewing, of Rising Sun, Md. Aged 76 years.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral services at the PIPPIN FUNERAL HOME, 269 E. Main Elkton, on Friday afternoon, October 17, at 1 p.m. Interment in Rose Bank Cemetery, Calvert, Md. Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday evening after 7 p.m. Masonic services by Union No.

48. A.F. A.M. will be at 8 p.m. Memorial contributions may be made to the Heart Fund, Pippin Funeral Home, Elkton, 21921.

DOWD In this city on Octeber 13, 1975. Richard T. husband of Mae F. Dowd 77 of years. Delamere Relatives Place, and Wilmington.

Aged friends are invited to attend the services at McCRERY MEMORIAL CHAPEL. Kirkwood Hwy Duncan Read Friday morning, Oct. 17 at BISCOE SR. In The Memorial Division of the Wilmingten Medical Center, on October 14, 1975. Byron S.

Biscee, Sr. Husband of Sallie E. Biscoe of 1322 Sycamore Eismere Gardens. Aged 90 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the services at Gracelawn Memorial Chapel, on Saturday merning, October 18, at 11 o'.

11 AM. Interment at Sliverbrook Memorial Park Cemetery. Friends may call at the funeral heme on Thursday evening after 1 PM. EPISCOPO in Delaware Division this city on Oct. 10, 1975 after a short illness.

Lewis J. Episcope, Sr. of. 527 Garrick Hockessin Ased 65 years. Relatives, friends, Fraternal Order of Eagles and members of St.

Anthony's Catholic Club are invited to attend the services at funeral from the CHARLES P. ARCARO FUNERAL HOME, 2309 Lancaster Ave. opposite Cathedral Cemetery Wednesday mornine. Oct. 15 at 9:30 A.M.

Mass of Christian Burial at St. Anthony's RC Church, at 9th DuPont 10:30 a.m. Interment at Cathedrai Cemetery. In lieu of flowers, contributions to to the American Cancer Society, Levering Wilmington, Del. HARRIS In Veteran's Hospital, Elsmere, Del.

on Oct. 10, 1975. Walter husband of Bertie Harris of 628 E. 11th Street. Father of Edward, Gertrude, Bertie Robert George James P.

and Diane L. Harris. Brether of Anna Mae Alston and Eva M. Clark of Philadelphia. Also survived by 17 grandchildren, 2 great-grandchildren and a host of other relatives.

Aged 73 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the services at the Ezion- Mt. Carmel United Methodist Church, 8th Walnut Sts. on Wed. evening, Oct.

15 at o'cleck. interment at Gracelawn Memorial Park on Thursday morning. Friends may call at the church on Wednesday from 6 until 8 p.m. Arrangements by the EDWARD R. BELL FUNERAL HOME.

LANGFORD In The St. Francis Hospital, on October 13, 1975. Mary, wife of the late Emmanuel E. Langford of 112 W. 19th Wilmington.

Aged 87 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the services from St. Mary's Chapel at the Cathedral Church of St. John, Concord Ave. Market Sts.

on Wednesday, October 15 at 10 o'clock. Interment at Gracelawn Memorial Park. Friends may call THE MCCRERY FUNERAL HOME, 2700 Washington Wilmington, on Wednesday morning at 9:15 a.m. LILLEY-In Union Hospital, ELKTON, Md. on October 12, 1975.

The Reverend Horace Birmingham Lilley. Husband of Frances Ensland Lilley of 208 Elkton Elkton, Md. Father of Mrs. Jane Mason Owings of Towson, Md. Brother of Mrs.

Etta Ford of North East, Md. Mrs. Mary White Cameron of North East, Md. Also survived by 2 grandchildren. Aged 69 years.

Relatives and friends are invited to attend the Funeral Services at St. Mary Anne's Episcopal Church, North East, Md. on Wednesday afterneon, October 15, at 2 o'- cleck. Intermment will be private. There will be no viewing.

Memorial contributions may be made to the Trinity Episcopal Church, Elkton, Md. St. Mary Anne's Episcopal Church, North East, Md. Pippin Funeral Hame, 259 E.Main Elkton, Md. 21921.

Arrangements by THE PIPPIN FUNERAL HOME, ELKTON, MD. MILLER in Lima, Pa. on October 13, 1975. Elizabeth, wife of the late Clarence Miller of West Chester, Pa. Formerly of Mc Daniel Heights.

Aged 76 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the services FUNERAL at the HOME, McCRERY Concord MEMORIAL 3124 Taileyville, Del. on Thursday afternoon, Oct. 16 at 1:30 p.m. Interment at Gracelawn Memorial Park.

Friends may call at the funeral home on Wednesday evening after 7. in lieu of flewers, the family suggests contributions be made to the Shriners Hospital for Crippled Children, Nur Temple, DuPont Parkway or Mt. Lebanon United Methodist Church, Mt 850 Mt. Lebanon Tallerville, Del. PHILLIPS In this city on October 12, 1975.

Olivia wife of Ford Phillips, of 505 W. 19th Wilmington, Del. Aged years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the services at the McCRERY MEMORIAL FUNERAL HOME, 3724 Concerd Pike, Talleyville, on Thursday morning, October 16, at 11 o'. clock.

Interment at Millington Cemetery, Millington, Md. Friends may call at the funeral home one hour prior to service time. in lieu of flowers, the family suggests contributiens be made to the Harrison Street United Methedist Church, 7th and Harrison Del. PIRI In Union Hospital, Elkton, Md. on Oct.

12, 1975. Joseph Piri, husband of Mrs. Catherine Pirl of Chesapeake City, Md. Father of Joseph Piri Jr. of Chesapeake City, Md.

Brether of Charles Pore of Duguein, Illinois and Mrs. Mary Polo nowski of Dewell, Illinois. Grandfather Joseph Piri, Ill and Donna Marie Piri of Chesapeake City, Md. Aged 54 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral services at PIPPIN FUNERAL HOME, Cecil Chesapeake City, Md.

on Wednesday morning Oct. 15, at 8:30. Requiem Mass at St. Basil's Ukrainian Catholic Church, Chesapeake City, Md. at 9 o'clock.

Interment at St. Rose of Lima Cemetery, Chesapeake City, Md. ROSS In this city on October of 427 Stahl Wilmingten Eugene, husband of Oiwyn Willams Ross Castle. Interment Aged 43 years. Funeral at Services private and the convenience of the family.

Friends may call at the SPICER FUNERAL HOME, DuPent Parkway and E. Van Buren Wilmingten. Maner on Thursday evening after 7. In lieu of flowers the family suogests contributions to the American Cancer Society, 1925 Lavering Wilmington, Del. 1975, SALAMON Frank in this husband city on of October 11, Pore Salamen of 1203 W.

4th Streat. of Theresa the late Michael and Philomena Salaman. Aged 70 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral from the MEALEY FUNERAL HOME, 7th and Breem on Wednesday morning, October 15 at 9 Mass of Christian Burial at St. Pauls R.C.

Church, 4th and Jackson Streets at 9 Interment at Cathedral Cometery. contributiens In lieu of the flewers American the family Cancer suogests to ety, 1925 Levering Ave. SPRINGER In Wilmington General Division en October 12, 1975. Carl C. Springer, brother of Rebecca Springer, of Cance Club Road, Newark, Del.

Aged 77 years. Relatives and friends are Invited to attend the services at the ROBERT T. JONES SONI FUNERAL HOME, 122 W. Main Street, Newark on Wednesday afternoon, October 15 at 2 Interment at Red Clay Creek Cemetery. Please omit flowers.

SPICER-MULLIKIN FUNERAL HOMES. 24th Market DE Phone 655-66 Wilmington Manor Delaware City Wednesday, Oct. 15, 1975 obituaries obituaries Georgia A. Warrington MILLSBORO Georgia A. Warrington, 74, of Riverdale, died Monday in Beebe Hospital, Lewes, after a long illness.

Her husband, John P. Warrington, died in August. Surviving are a son, Jesse D. Parsons ofDagsboro; three stepsons, Charles J. Stevenson of Dagsboro, Samuel W.

Warrington of Georgetown, and James D. Warrington of Satellite Beach, four sisters, Eva Hitchens of Dagsboro, Minnie Pusey and Olivett McCabe, both of Millsboro, and Mary Brittingham of Delmar; three brothers, Lloyd Lewis of Frankford, Henry Lewis of Dagsboro, and Theodore Lewis of Millsboro; 12 grandchildren, and one great-grandchild. Services will be Friday afternoon at 2 at the James Watson Funeral Home, Millsboro, where friends may call tomorrow night. Interment will be in Millsboro Cemetery. Lida M.

Harris BRIDGEVILLE Lida M. Harris, 78, of 111 Cannon Bridgeville, died Monday night in Kent General Hospital, Dover, after a short illness. Mrs. Harris is survived by her husband, Leonard D. Harris two sons, Leonard D.

Jr. of Bridgeville and Layton of Georgetown; a daughter, Helen M. Miller of Marysville, a brother, John Willey Jr. of Stuart, four grandchildren and six greatgrandchildren. Services will be tomorrow afternoon at 2 at the Hardesty Funeral Home, 202 Laws Bridgeville, where friends may tonight.

Burial will be in Bridgeville Cemetery. Ralph R. Crothers ELKTON, Md. Ralph R. Crothers, 7 76, of 202 Parkway, Elkton, died Monday at his home after a short illness.

Mr. Crothers was secretarytreasurer of the town Elkton from 1933-1941 and 1955-1968. He also had been town engineer and superintendent of public works for Elkton. He was a director of the Peoples Bank of 1 Elkton and was clerk of the court for Cecil County for 12 years. He had worked as an engineer before coming Elkton.

He is survived by his wife, Ethel R. Crothers; a daughter, Phyllis Jean Crothers of Catonsville; a brother, retired army general J. Alex Crothers of Wilmington, and a sister, Mrs. Harvey W. Ewin Sr.

of Rising Sun. Services will be Friday afternoon at 1 at the Pippin Funeral Home, 259 E. Main Elkton, where friends may call tomorrow night. A Masonic service will be held at the funeral home tomorrow night Burial will be in Rose Bank Cemetery, Calvert. In lieu flowers, contributions may be made to the Heart Fund in care 'of the funeral home.

R. Eugene Ross R. Eugene Ross, 63, of 427 Stahl Wilmington Manor, died Monday at St. Francis Hospital following a long illness. Mr.

Ross had been a salesman with Gambacorta Motors Inc. in New Castle for the last 10 years. He is survived by his wife, Olwym Williams Ross; two sons, Robert E. Jr. at home and Stephen W.

of Bear; a brother, Leland of New Castle; a sister, Mrs. George Price of Harrington; and a granddaughter. Services and interment will be private. Friends may call tomorrow night at the Spicer-Mullilin Funeral Home, Du Pont Hwy, and E. Van Buren Wilmington Manor.

In lieu of flowers the family suggests contributions to the American Cancer Society, 1925 Lovering Ave. Herman McClee Lawton LEWES Herman McClee Lawton, 46, of Burtons Lewes, was found dead Monday at Du Pont Ave. School, 'Lewes, where he was a custodian. He died of an apparent heart attack. He is survived by his wife, Ernestine Lawton; two sons, Michael and Jeffrey, both at home; five sisters and three brothers.

Services will be tomorrow night at 8 at Christ Church, Harbeson, where friends may call an hour earlier. Burial will be Sunday in Norfolk, Va. Richard T. Dowd Sr. Richard T.

Dowd 77, of 418 Delaware Place, died Monday at General Division after a short illness. He retired in 1963 as a lithographer for Continental Can Co. after 42 years. Mr. Dowd is survived by his wife Mae a son, Richard of Newark; a sister, Isabel Allen of Winter Park, one grandchild and two great-grandchildren.

Services will be Friday morning at 11 at McCrery Memorial Chapel, Kirkwood Hwy. and Dun-. can Rd. where friends may call tomorrow night. Interment will be in Silverbrook Memorial Park.

Byron S. Biscoe Sr. Byron S. Biscoe 90, of 1322 Sycamore Elsmere Gardens, died yesterday at Memorial Division after a short illness. He was a retired carpenter.

Mr. Biscoe is survived by his wife Sallie two sons, Byron with whom he lived, and Edward M. of Salisbury, four daughters, Corinne Heskett of Townsend, Marie Santucci of Newark, Grace Hotmer of New Castle, and Elizabeth LeCates of Wilmington; 12 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. Services will be Saturday morning at 11 at Gracelawn Memorial Park Chapel, where friends may call an hour earlier. Interment will be in Gracelawn Memorial Park.

It is requested that flowers be omitted. Horace H. Ewan Horace H. Ewan, 96, of Newark Manor Nursing Home, 254 W. Main Newark, died yesterday at the nursing home after a long illness.

Mr. Ewan was a retired glass worker from the Armstrong Cork Millville, N.J., where he lived until five years ago. His wife, Minnie Ewan, died in 1970. He is survived by a son, Kenneth of Newark; three grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. Services will be Friday morning at 11 at the Rocap-Shannon Funeral Home, Millville, N.J., where friends may call tomorrow night.

Burial will be in Mount Pleasant Cemetery, Millville, N.J. Conference set by Bear church Red Lion United Methodist Church at Bear opens its 6th annual Missionary Conference tonight with a presentation by Wycliffe Bible Tanslators at 7 p.m. Other programs during the week include: the Rev. Larry Jafmissionary with American board of missions to the Jews, Thursday; the Rev. Gerald Foster, Bridgeville, president of the American Leprosy Missions, Friday.

Both sessions start at 7 p.m. Saturday will feature a youth meeting in the afternoon. At 7 that night Youth with a Mission, a group of 25 young people from Hammonton, N.J., will sing and present testimony. Sunday night, Oct. 19, the Rev.

Melvin Floyd, founder and director of Neighbor Crusades, will tell of his work. 3 rites scheduled for Father Cornely Two Masses and a memorial service have been scheduled as final rites for the Rev. Francis P. Cornely, Rehoboth Beach Catholic pastor who died last week in Rome. The priest, pastor of St.

Edmond's Church, Rehoboth and St. Jude Mission, Lewes, died of an apparent heart attack Oct. 7' Deaths SAUNDERS In this city on Oct. 11, 1975. Marie M.

Saunders of 2114 Spruce St. Mother of Callomae Dunham and Malor Saunders, Jr. Devoted friend of Clarence Spright. Also survived by 10 grandchildren and 10 great Relatives and friends invited to attend the funeral from the Scott A.M.E. Zion Church at 7th and Spruce Sts.

on Wed. evening, Oct. 15, at o'clock. Further services and interment will be held in Union, S.C. Friends may call at the church on Wed.

from 6 until 8 p.m. Arrangements by the EDWARD R. BELL FUNERAL HOME. WILLIAMS in this city on Oct. 12, 1975.

Rose Mae Williams of 1118 Pleasant St. Mother ef Pearline Sanders Nellie Mae Williams, daughter of George Williams, sister of Luther and Harry Williams, grandmother of Daron Williams, Jonettle, Joseph and Jermaine Sanders, also survived by a host of nieces and nephews, aunt uncle and friends. Aged 57 years. Relatives and friends are invited to attend the funeral services from the funeral Home of EDWARD R. BELL, 109 Poplar St.

on Friday evening, Oct. 17, at 8:00 o'clock. Interment Gracelawn Memorial Park on Saturday morning. Friends may call at the Funeral Home, Friday evening from 6 to 8 o'clock. Jailbreak 'ringleader' caught in Indiana SALEM, Ill.

(AP) The alleged ringleader of a prison break that freed five convicts from a maximum security penitentiary was captured without a struggle yesterday in Bloomfield, about 100 miles from where he was being sought. Henry M. Gargano, 43, of Chicago, who was serving a 199-year sentence for murdering two Chicago policemen during a bank robbery, was the fourth escapee captured since the Friday night break at the Marion Federal Penitentiary. Authorities had considered Gargano the ringleader and the most dangerous of the escapees. The five escaped from the highsecurity prison by opening electronic doors with two gadgets they built in the prison shop.

Indiana officials and FBI agents said Gargano was captured while walking along railroad tracks N.J. teen wins right to sue FBI PHILADELPHIA (AP) A New Jersey won the right to sue federal governteen ment yesterday because the FBI investigated her after she wrote a letter to a left-wing political party as a school project. The 3rd U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals said Lori Paton of Morristown, N.J., can challenge the constitutionality of an FBI check on letters going to the political group and the subsequent investigation. But the three-judge panel reversed a federal district court order that the girl's file be destroyed.

The court said although Miss Paton had the right to seek the expungement, the record in the case did not support it. As part of a social studies course at West Morris Mendham High School, Miss Paton, who was 16 at the time, wrote a letter in 1973 to the Socialist Labor Party seeking information about its policies, but inadvertently addressed it to the Socialist Workers Party. The FBI had established a mail cover on the Socialist Workers Party. The FBI detailed an agent to investigate Miss Paton, according to court records. The agent interviewed her principal and vice principal, then recommended that the case be closed.

Miss Paton found out about the investigation from school officials. Miss Paton and her father, Arthur, and William Gabrielson, the teacher who had assigned the project, filed suit in U.S. District Court in Newark, N.J., seeking $65,000 in damages from the agents in charge of the investigation. The suit contended it was unconstitutional for the FBI to intercept her letter, investigate her and compile files. The suit also sought an injunction against the FBI barring it from engaging in such activities in the future and ordering it to destroy the files on Miss Paton.

In April 1974 the plaintiffs additionally alleged a violation of the federal Freedom of Information Act and sought $10,010 damages. The lower court ordered that file be destroyed, but ruled for the FBI on all other counts. The appeals court decision yesterday, written by Judge Max Rosen, said Miss Paton was entitled to money damages if she could prove her claim that her First Amendment rights were violated. The court declined to rule on whether the suit could be brought as a class action. The case was sent back to the lower court.

Church notes attendance dip BOSTON (AP) Attendance at Catholic Masses across the nation dropped by one third between 1963 and 1974, according to a churchsponsored study. The report, conducted by the National Catholic Opinion Research Center in Chicago, said people are showing reservations about religious institutions, and are not necessarily less concerned with their religious lives. Half the decline in Sunday Mass attendance can be attributed to the church's stance on birth control, a quarter of the drop comes from attitudes toward divorce and another quarter from attitudes toward the Pope as head of the church, the study said. Pa. grants rise in phone rates HARRISBURG (AP) The Public Utility Commission yesterday granted Bell Telephone Co.

an increase that will raise the phone bills of 3.5-million Pennsylvania customers beginning in about a week. Bell officials were not immediately certain how much the average phone bill would rise, but a spokesman said the effect on the average customer would be minimal, amounting to pennies per month. near a lumber yard about five miles from Bloomfield. Police were alerted by a woman who said Gargano had asked her for a glass of water and she thought he looked suspicious. Another of the escapees was also captured because he went to homes to ask for water.

William Collins, a Green County, sherrif's deputy, said Gargano did not have a weapon and offered no resistance. "I'm the man' you're looking for," Collins quoted Gargano as saying. IRS studies multiple tax deadlines WASHINGTON (UPI)-The Internal Revenue Service is considering a plan to set up more than one income tax filing deadline, IRS Commissioner Donald Alexander says. Under the plan, Alexander said, the IRS would divide taxpayers into groups and give each group its own deadline. Alexander said the current month filing period from Jan.

1 to April 15 has created problems for both taxpayers and the IRS, which could be alleviated by a staggered filing ssytem. Speaking to the 88th annual meeting of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants in San Antonio, Alexander said the large concentration of refund returns that pile up at the beginning and end of the present filing period overload IRS tax preparers, accountants and lawyers, and prevent quick refunds to taxpayers. Staggered filing, Alexander said, would prevent this pileup and allow the IRS to do a quicker and more efficient job. Alexander said, however, thatdurng the first year of implementation "some taxpayers would have more time to prepare their returns than others and some taxpayers will have to wait much longer than others to receive their Staggered filing, if adopted, would be particularly burdensome to employers, who would have to file necessary W2 forms throughout the year. Icebergs seen in Alaska waters WASHINGTON (AP) The U.S.

Geological Survey said yesterday that the Columbia Glacier may be starting to discharge icebergs into the Alaskan shipping lanes. The USGS said that unusually large discharges came from the glacier last month. The icebergs were seen over a large area of Prince William Sound, including the shipping lanes serving Valdez, the part chosen for tankers to transport oil from Alaska's north slope when the 800-mile Alaska pipeline is completed. Inside job seen in blasts PINE RIDGE, S.D. (AP) "I think this proves we have subversives on the reservation," Oglala Sioux Chief Judge Theodore Tibbetts said yesterday as the FBI continued its probe of bomb damage to government buildings on the Pine Ridge Indian Reservation.

Tibbetts, whose chambers were one of the four blast sites hit early Monday, said the bombers were "trying to wreck law and order I think professionals prepared the explosives." FBI agent Richard Held would not speculate on who the bombers were but said one of the bombs appeared to be C4, a putty-like military explosive. Agents also found what appeared to be dynamite with percussion caps. Paperworkers expand strike MONTREAL (UPI) Strikes against Canada's pulp and paper industry spread eastward Sunday as more than 7,000 workers idled 10 mills in Quebec and one in New Brunswick, cutting the nation's newsprint production to 55 percent of capacity. The latest strikes, by the member Canadian Paperworkers Union, brought to 22,400 the number of striking CPU members across Canada, and to 9,200 the number in Quebec. Seventy percent of Canadian newsprint production is exported to the United States, with much of the remainder shipped overseas.

Canada sets controls OTTAWA (UPI) Finance Minister Donald MacDonald announced yesterday that Canada will remain under inflation-fighting wage and price controls for the next three years. MacDonald said the measure should reduce inflation from its present annual rate of 10.6 percent to 4 percent within three years. Friday Noon 12 P.M. 'W'd to 04 7 PAPERS thru LOL A.M. Monday A.M.

0. Saturdays cO Sundays Noon NEWS-JOURNAL Call in Rome while walking down the' street. The body is being sent back to the United States for burial this week. A Mass of Christian Burial will be offered at St. Edmond's Church at 8 p.m.

tomorrow with the' principal concelebrant the Msgr. Paul J. Schierse, eposcopal vicar of the Wilmington Catholic' Diocese. The body of Father Cornely will lie in state at the church from 4 to 8 p.m. At 11 a.m.

on Friday, the Most Rev. Thomas J. Mardaga, bishop of the Wilmington Catholic Diocese, will be chief concelebrant at a Mass at St. Jude's Church, Del. 14, Lewes, when the homilist will be the Rev.

Charles McGinley, St. Helena's Church, Bellefonte. Father Cornely was in, residence at St. Helena's a year ago while on sick leave. Interment will take place Saturday at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery in Philadelphia.

A memorial Mass for the people will be offered next Wednesday (Oct. 22) at 7 p.m. at St. Helena's. Father Cornely had been a priest in the Diocese of Wilmington since 1949 and had served pariches from Wilmington to Cambridge, Md.

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