Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Daily Times from Salisbury, Maryland • 11

Publication:
The Daily Timesi
Location:
Salisbury, Maryland
Issue Date:
Page:
11
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

Deaths MRS. LEWIS A. ROSS DELMAR Funeral services will be held Monday at 10:30 Holy Redeemer Catholic Church for a member, Mrs. Clara F. Ross, 57, of near Delmar.

She died Friday in Peninsula General Hospital after a short illness. Her husband is Lewis A. Ross. The Rev. William Irwin will officiate.

Interment will be here Stephen's Cemetery. Born at Delmar, she was a daughter of the Salvadore Tamburino. Surviving in to her husband are two sons, Tony L. Delmar; four grandchildren; three brothers, Peter, Dan and Norman Tamburino, of Quakertown, and a sister, Anna. Friends may call here at the Marvel Short Funeral Home tonight from 7 to 9 o'clock, where prayers will be said at 8 o'clock.

J. H. COULBOURN JR. CRISFIELD Graveside services will be held p.m. for Joseph Harry Coulbourn who died Friday night in a house fire.

The services will be held at Sunnyridge Memorial Park Senart officiating. Rev. Cecil S. The year and three-month-old boy is survived by his parents, Joseph Tinker and Patsy Bozman Coulbourn: half sisters, Mrs. Tammi Whitby of Stevensville, Mrs.

Terri Bozman, Miss Traci Coulbourn, Miss Renee Evans, all of Crisfield and a brother, Eric Evans, also of Crisfield. He is also survived by his paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Bud Coulbourn; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.

Ray Bozman; the maternal great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Earl Mears and Mrs. Daisy Bozman and the maternal great great grandmother, Mrs. Clara J.

Sterling, all of Crisfield. Service Schedules Frank C. Boes Today, at 1 p.m. in Hinman Funeral Home, Princess Anne; burial in Grace Episcopal Cemetery, Mt. Vernon; friends may call at funeral home today from noon to 1 p.m.

Miss Virginia L. Goodman Today at 1:30 p.m. in Bradshaw and Sons Funeral Home, Crisfield: burial in Sunnyridge Memorial Park: friends may call at funeral home today from 12:30 to 1:30 p.m. Illinois Milbourne Today at 1:30 p.m. Wesley Methodist Church, Deal Island; burial in church cemetery.

James H. Purcell Today at 2 p.m. in Holloway Funeral Home; burial in Springhill Memory Garden; friends may call at funeral home today from 1 to 2 p.m. Mrs. Chester L.

Clogg Today at 2 p.m. in Blackwater Fellowship Church, near Roxana; burial in Millsboro Cemetery. William J. Savage Today at 2. p.m.

in Williams Funeral Home. Onancock: burial in Fairview Lawn Cemetery, Onancock. Mrs. Leon Webster Today at 3 p.m. in St.

Paul's United Methodist Church, Wenona; burial in church cemetery. Miss Elsie M. Charnick Today at 3:30 p.m. in Bradshaw and Sons Funeral Home, Crisfield; burial in Sunnyridge Memorial Park, Crisfield. Mrs.

Franklin D. Milligan Monday, 1 p.m. in Zion AME Church, East New Market; burial in East New Market Cemetery; friends may call at tonight from to 9 o'clock and on Monday from noon to 1 p.m. James Leon Gates Monday, p.m. in Bethel AME Church, Easton; burial in Richard's Memorial Park, Easton; friends may call at Metropolitan United Methodist Church, Princess Anne, tonight from 7 to 8 o'clock and at Bethel Church Monday from 11 a.m.

to 1 p.m. Union Talks Are Postponed TOWSON (AP) -Negotiations between the American Totalisator Co. and the union representing the firm's employees have been postponed "by mutual agreement" until next week. company president James H. Pierce said Friday.

A strike at the Towson-based company was threatened earlier this week, when the workers' contract expired, but the contract was extended until March 10 and a bargaining schedule originally slated for Friday. A strike could hamper operations at race tracks around the country and in Canada which use American Tote equipment. Real Grass Ad Draws $100 Fine ALBANY, N.Y. (AP) In an unusual turnaround, the state Attorney General cracked down on a woman who wasn't selling marijuana. Carole Corbo of Port Washington, a community Long Island, placed an advertisement in the Village Voice, a weekly newspaper, early in January, according Atty.

Gen Louis Lefkowitz. It read: "MARIJUANA cannot mail but 'Grass' can; Grass Homegrown Grass; First Time Sold Publicly; 1, oz, bag Lefkowitz said Thursday the advertisement implied the woman was selling marijuana, when she really was offering lawn grass. Astronomers Probe Space Closer Home MRS. GEORGE F. WALLS PRINCESS ANNE Funeral services will be held Monday at 2 p.m.

here in the Wilson Funeral Home for Mrs. Doris W. Tull Walls, 61, of Princess Anne, who died Friday in Peninsula General Hospital after short illness. The Rev. Harvey Dixon will officiate.

Interment will be here in the Oliver T. Beauchamp Cemetery. Born in Laurel, she was a daughter of the late Albert H. and Caroline Calloway Waller. Her first husband, James Albert Tull, was killed during World War II.

Her second husband was George F. Walls, who died in 1965. She was a member here of Antioch United Methodist Church and its WSCS and of the Auxiliary to the Oliver T. Beauchamp American Legion Post. Surviving are a son, R.

Wayne Tull, Fruitland; daughters, Mrs. Winston Outten, Pocomoke City, and Charles Frye and Mrs. Joyce W. Norfleet, Salisbury, and She five also grandchildren. sisters, Mrs.

Ira Collins, Federalsburg, and Mrs. A. G. Powell, Washington, D. and two brothers, Martin J.

and Raymond Waller, Laurel. MRS. LAVESTA CHANDLER ONANCOCK Funeral services will be held Monday at 11 a.m. here in the Bethel AME Church for Mrs. LaVesta Griffin Chandler of Hartford, formerly of Onancock.

She died Thursday in Hartford. Mrs. Chandler was a retired Accomack County school teacher. She was born in Accomack County. Surviving is a son, the Rev.

Everett Chandler, Hartford. Officiating will be the Rev. Chester Morris. Interment will be in Calvary Cemetery, Norfolk. Friends may call at the Wharton and Savage Funeral Home, Accomac, tonight from 6 to 8 o'clock.

J. H. COULBOURNE JR. CRISFIELD Graveside services will be held Monday at 2 p.m. for Joseph Harry Coulbourne who died Friday night in a house fire.

services will be held at Sunnyridge Memorial Park here, with the Rev. Cecil S. Smart officiating. The year and three month old boy is survived by his parents, Joseph Tinker and Patsy man Coulbourne; four half sisters. Mrs.

Tammi Whitby of Stevensville. Mrs. Terri Bozman, Miss Traci Coulbourne, Miss Renee Evans. all of Crisfield and a half brother, Eric Evans, also of Crisfield. He is also survived by his paternal grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Coulbourne; maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ray Bozman; the maternal great grandparents, and Mrs. Ray Bozman; the maternal great grandparents, Mr.

and Mrs. Earl Mears and Mrs. Daisy Bozman and the maternal great great grandmother, Mrs. Clara J. Sterling, all of Crisfield.

The first telephone directory in the world was published Feb. 21, 1878, listing the 50 subscribers to the New Haven Telephone Co. Lassen Peak, the most recently active volcano in the continental United States, is located in Lassen Volcanic National Park, California. Salisbury, Mar. 6.

1977 SUNDAY A11 Mining Families Refuse To Give Up Their Hopes TOWER CITY. Pa. (AP) His son, 8-year-old Ronnie wants him to use karate. Sister Carol wants to pipe him whisky. His wife, Anna Mae, just wants to hold him in her arms.

Everybody prays. And waits. And hopes. After a day of heavy rain, the sun broke through on Saturday, warming the black earth that still traps Ronald Adley and seven other anthracite coal miners a mile underground in a northeastern Pennsylvania mountain. Adley's family can manage a smile and chat with reservation, knowing their 37-year-old miner is alive and chewing tobacco underground.

Rescuers are tunneling slowly toward him, but the families of the seven others march in dim clusters, uncertain whether their men will pulled alive from the mine that gave them their livlihood. They do not talk. They do not smile. Two women in black scarves huddled together and walked back and forth like pickets through the mine site's mud. Children are sombre as they munch on potato chips and gulp sodas.

Even thougn it's been almost a week since this a mysterious pool of water raged like a killing flood through the workings, trapping ten men the bodies of two already have been recovered nobody's giving up on the seven from whom nothing's been either seen or heard. "You can't give up said a retired miner, Bill Reiner. "If their wives and sweethearts and children didn't there was hope they'd go home, they wouldn't be at the mine waiting and watching. "Would you give up until yopu saw them? These people are the same way. One girl awaits on 8 boyfriend and her father.

A grizzled, gap-toothed wearing a volunteer fireman's jacket was concerned about a grandson. "You can't do a damn thing for he muttered, shaking his finger at a reporter and turning away. The Adley family is acutely aware that now is no time for celebration, and they are careful not to show too much joy. After all the men who worked beside him are still missing. Only Adley's brother, Robert, a landfill worker, and his sisterin-law, Kate, do any considerbable talking with outsiders.

"Snap Adley's knickname is okay. He knows the people who love him are waiting outside," said Robert's wife, Kate, a plump, gregarious blonde as she munched an apple in the Salvation Army emergency kitchen. "We wait and we pray for everybody. Wearing jeans with a heart stitched on it, Kate said the Adley children are well and excitedis son says his father knows karate and ought to use it to get Kate said. "I'm sure if they gave him a pick he'd use it to chop his way out." Carol Kreiser, Adley's sister, said, "I'd send him a pint of whisky and if he wanted more I'd send that Adley's wife, Anna Mae, stays from the mine.

away, I want to do is hold Ronald in my arms again," she told her sister-in-law. WM. V. SIPPLE SON The selection of a Family monument is a serious responsibility that need not be placed on your family at the time of need. Have your own memorial erected now while they're time to devote proper care and forethought to your choice.

SEALMARK1 (ROCK TO OFFICE DISPLAY ADJACENT S. SCHUMAKER DRIVE OF AGES 749 7303 By WARREN E. LEARY AP Science Writer WASHINGTON (AP) Astronomers who normally look billions of into space have turned radio telescope miles, back to earth and discovered a simple new way to monitor atmospheric chemicals and pollutants. To find out what chemicals are floating in the distant re cesses of our galaxy, scientists tune in to the natural radio signals generated by certain molecules. Astronomers at Harvard Cole lege Observatory and the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory in Cambridge, found that the same principle also works closer to home.

The National Science Foundation said Saturday that the radio telescope at Haystack Observatory in Westford, so far has detected and measured water vapor, ozone and carbon monoxide in the upper levels of the atmosphere. The foundation said the importance of the development is that it opens the way for relatively inexpensive, groundbased monitoring of atmospheric areas far above the level of conventional weather balloons. The first tests probed the mesophere, an area 30 to 50 miles high normally accessible only to expensive devices such as rockets or special balloons. Harrison E. Radford, an astronomer on the project, said in an interview that the key to the technique is the supersensitive microwave receivers recently developed, making detection possible where previous efforts had failed.

"We used the radiotelescope because it had a good microwave receiver on it, but actually you don't need the rest of the telescope at all." Radford continued. "A good receiver with a rudimentary antenna probably could do about as Radford said molecules like water vapor send out natural radio waves at distinct frequencies. Measuring frequency variations also can tell scientists the approximate altitude of molecular concentrations. "If you know the frequency of the molecule, you can tune your receiver to pick up the molecule Radford said. The National Science Foundation financed the project primarily to see if it could monitor high ozone, a atmosphere former of that oxygen shields in the earth from highenergy solar radiation.

Since 1883, families of this area have been calling this firm for the best funeral service available because they have CONFIDENCE in the name and the service they render. HOLLOWAY FUNERAL HOME PROFESSIONAL ASSOCIATION 742-5141 ONSM Snow Hill Rd. Schumaker Salisbury, Md. MEMBERSHIP BY OVER 90 YEARS INVITATION SERVICE FOR ARE YOU USING YESTERDAYS FOR TODAY'S WORK. On the farm, this can be a mighty costly process.

Today's sophisticated farm methods demand the finest in farm equipment. If your equipment is behind the times and you're strapped a little financially, come in for a chat with Peninsula Bank's friendly farm loan officer. It's a good bet that he'll not only help you upgrade your present equipment, but loan you money for other farm improvements as well. Stop in today at the Peninsula Bank office nearest you. You'll find we make banking what banking should be; a pleasure for us, a pleasure for you.

Peninsula Bank Affiliate Accounts Mercantile insured to Bankshares $40,000 Corp. MEMBER FDIC SIX OFFICES: Princess Anne, Crisfield, Salisbury, Berlin, Ocean City. RUSSELL A. FOOKS VI Kate said Mrs. Adley had re ceived a dozen red roses and a promise of $10,000 for the exclusive story of her husband's ordeal.

She was disgusted that anyone could talk about money, said Kate, adding: "I won't you exactly what she said about it. will tell his own story when he's ready." The Adley home sits unpretentiously on Grand Avenue, the main drag in tiny Tower City (pop. It's just a 2.4-mile drive along Pa. 209 to the mouth of the Porter Tunnel of the Kocher Coal Co. where tragedy struck Tuesday afternoon.

Miners and neighbors know Adley as a guy who is close to his family. "He bums so many cigaretts from me," said a retired miner named Dave, whose law, Charlie Shutt, brother shoulder-to-shoulder with Adley. hasn't been down in that mind for four months, he got hurt, and that's a damn good thing for he'd be right with 'Snap' on the same Dave said. He was sipping a beer at a saloon a hundred yards from the Adley home and was a little up set that the rescue work was going SO slowly. He said it seemed to focuse entirely on Adley.

Reiner, the retired miner, agreed. God, they know Adley's alive," Reiner said. "Why don't they concentrate on finding the others. Something's very wrong up Kitty's Flowers NEXT TO PENINSULA GENERAL HOSPITAL A SERVICE OF LEVERANCE AND ECONOMY WEST ROAD Y. MD.

Phones 740 08 883-3414 RUSSELL A. FOOKS: DIRECTOR, EMBALMER RESTORATIVE ART Since 1877 MEMBER THE OF GOLDEN THE Hill-Kaker-Bounds RULE FUNERAL HOME Louse Hall Norman Baker Gerald Bounds WILSON FUNERAL HOME Successors WALLACE FUNERAL HOME OCEAN CITY RD. PHONE 749-5206 MONUMENT DEALER PHONE 749-5142 Levin R. Wilson, Licensed Funeral Director Embalmer MEDICAL OXYGEN Portable Home Set- MONAGHAN IPPB MACHINES "We Bill Medicare Directly" No 1313 -MEDICARE APPROVED AMES PLAZA DRUGS Phone 749-2308 Located in Ames Shopping Plaza Between Ames Discount Store The Ultimate Portrait I Package in Classic Create Your Own Color Portrait Choose From Several Beautiful Scenic Backgrounds 2-8x10-2-5x7 8-Wallets Deposit When Photographed 8x10 8x 10 Entire Pkg. $10.96 Less Deposit .98 Balance Delivery $9.98 5x7 5x7 Entire Package Orders Only As Shown Satisfaction Guaranteed or Deposit Refunded All Ages -Tell Your Friends! Groups $1.00 Extra Per Person Fast Delivery Courteous Service WALLETS LESS THAN A PICTURE! WALLETS Kodak paper.

For a good look at the times of your life. TUESDAY thru SATURDAY MARCH 8-12 Route 50 Tilghman Road Phone 749-1145 Tues. Wed. 10 A.M. to 1 P.M.

2 P.M. to 6 P.M. Thurs. Fri. 10 A.M.

to to P.M. 2 P.M. to 7:30 P.M. Sat. 10 A.M.

to 1 P.M. -2 P.M. to 5:30 P.M. yairs always A Product.

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

About The Daily Times Archive

Pages Available:
1,022,093
Years Available:
1923-2024