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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 37
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Tampa Bay Times from St. Petersburg, Florida • 37

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St. Petersburg, Florida
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a a a 0 ST. PETERSBURG TIMES WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1984 78 obituaries Gulfport, BARNES, died MARY R. SNOW, 87, of 1414 59th St. DANIELS, DOUGLAS 77, of St. Petersburg, from her Tuesday (Sept.

11, 1984). She came here died Tuesday (Sept. 11, 1984). Born in Canada, native Great Barrington, where she was a here in 1970 from Peekskill, N.Y. and WAS retired schoolteacher.

She was a member of the Most Holy Name electrical engineer for a railroad. He was a member of the Jesus Catholic Church of Gulfport. Survivors include a Peekskill Masonic Lodge. Survivors include his wife ters, stepson Helen Orville H. Englewood, and two stepdaugh- Ethel; a nephew Murvine Hodgins, St.

Petersburg, and Hubbard, Fairfield, and Doris Rogers, two nieces. Alan R. McLeod Funeral Directors. Lake Wales; eight grandchildren, and four children. Robert D.

Easter Funeral Home, Gulfport. great-grandJONES, CHARLES JOSEPH, 47, of 1501. 28th died Sunday (Sept. 9, 1984). Born in Wakulla Drive BERNARD C.

74, of 6634 King- County, he came here in 1976 from Tallahassee and BEALL, was a Monday (Sept. 10, 1984). Born in construction worker. He was a Baptist. Survivors include died attsville, Md.

and he came here in 1954 from Hy- his wife Mary; his mother and Capitol Heights, was a boat painter. member of Raymond Nicholson of St. stepfather, Essie Mae and the Seventh Day Adventist Church. Survivors include Petersburg; a son, Anthony, son Bernard St. Petersburg, sisters, Cather- Mary L.

Jones of Tallahassee, and a sister a Tallahassee; three daughters including Caroline and ine Dovell, Ada Annista Jones, Ammann and Theresa Van Ryswick, all of St. Petersburg. David C. Gross Funeral Home, Ninth Maryland, and Rita Pummell, Pennsylvania. Robert D.

Easter Funeral Home, Gulfport. Avenue Chapel. BLUMKE, JOSEPH 66, of Redington Beach, KENT, FRANK 34, of 4961 10th Ave. died died Tuesday (Sept. 11, 1984).

Born in Brooklyn, N.Y., he Monday (Sept. 10, 1984). Born in Wellesley, he came here in 1973 from East Rockaway, N.Y. and was a came here in 1952 from White Plains, N.Y. and WAS a retired tester for a brewing company.

He was a Catholic. salesman for an audio recording company. He was Survivors include his wife Evelyn; two sons, Joseph, member of Palm Lake Christian Church. Survivors inLynbrook, N.Y., and Dennis, Huntington, N.Y.; a step- clude his wife Sherrie; two daughters, Stacie and Shandaughter Janet Koch, Middletown, N.J.; a brother Joseph non Kent, his mother Jane Kent and his father James, all South Ozone Park, N.Y.; two sisters, Gloria Hock, of St. Petersburg.

R. Lee Williams Funeral Home. Largo, and Dorothy Fey, Howard Beach, N.Y.; 11 grandchildren, and a great-grandchild. Lewis W. Mohn Funeral POPE, IRENE Home, Seminole.

80, of 3301 58th Ave. died Monday (Sept. 10, 1984). Frankfort, she BOZARTH, PAUL 67, of 1699 68th St. died came husband here in Banks 1953 from Survivors include her Detroit." Tuesday (Sept.

11, 1984). Born in Ohio, he came here in a daughter Virginia A. Kaul, South1951 from Dayton, Ohio and was a retired groundskeeper. gate, seven grandchildren, and a great-grandson. He was an Army veteran World War II, a Protestant Anderson-McQueen Funeral Home.

and a member of DAV of St. Petersburg. Survivors include a daughter Bonnie Riley, Ruskin; a brother John, REICHENBACH, REV. JAY 78, of 1809 Tya sister Josephine Burris, Dayton. Gee Pitts died Tuesday (Sept.

11, 1984). Born in Funeral Home. Hershey, he came here in 1976 from Bradenton, and was a retired Methodist minister. He was a member of CHILDS, IRMA Oakhurst United Methodist Church and Florida 81, of 125 32nd Ave. NE, died rial Conference.

Survivors include his wife Monday (Sept. 10, 1984). Born in Belleville, she came Irene; a son here in from Dania and was a Catholic. Survivors Robert, Miami; a daughter Sandra Lawson, Northborinclude two cousins, Martha and E. V.

Sanders of Orlan- ough, a stepson William Johnson, Largo; a stepdo. Anderson-McQueen Funeral Home. daughter Patricia Poget, Clearwater; 10 grandchildren, and nine great-grandchildren. Alan R. McLeod Funeral Directors.

CRIPPEN, REID, 87, of Seminole, died Monday (Sept. 10, 1984). in Tarpon Springs, he came 1969 from New Jersey, where he was electri- SHANE, MINNETTE 93, of 1035 Arlington a consulting Ave. died cal engineer. He was member of Tenakill Tuesday (Sept.

11, 1984). Born in Kansas, a Tenafly Masonic Lodge and a Navy veteran of World War came 1982 Camden, and was a she here in from N.J. Survivors include his wife Edythe; a son Richard, St. was a include retired teacher. She Protestant.

Survivors two nieces, Jeanette R. Miller, St. Petersburg, and MarPrice, a of a jorie L. Whorton, Dunedin, and a nephew Stuart C. Petersburg; daughter Barbara Trepte, and sister both California; four grandchildren, and National Cremation Saul, two great National Cremation Society.

Virginia Beach, Va. Society. DAHL, DOROTHY 62, of 191 Lido Drive, STAWARKY, died 70, VIVIAN of 11098 111th St. St. Petersburg Beach, died Monday (Sept.

10, 1984). Born (Sept. 10, Seminole, Monday 1984). Born in in Woodbury, N.J., she in 1956 from Gibbs- Yonkers, N.Y., she came here a year from South Survivors came here Salem, N.Y. and town, N.J.

include her husband Alf; a son was a retired private secretary for U.S. Rubber Co. She was a member of Blessed Sacrament Robert El Paso, Texas; a daughter Dahlene Kladder, St. Petersburg Beach; her mother Weller, and Catholic Church, Seminole. Survivors include two sisters, sister Lois Gregory, both of Redland, Mary and three a Margaret Burton and Marion Yedowitz of Pinellas Park; Kenfield Beach Memorial Chapel.

a brother Charles Semenetz, South Salem, and a niece Marianne Myslicki, Largo. Lewis W. Mohn Funeral grandchildren. Home, Seminole. JOHNSON, CALLIE 45, of 4353 16th Ave.

died Tuesday (Sept. 11, 1984). She came here 35 years ago WHITE, MARY formerly of 2000 20th Ave. from her native Colquitt, Ga. and was an died Monday (Sept.

10, 1984) in Pitman, N.J. Survivors employee of Gulf Star Boat Co. She was include a son Hugh Pennington, N.J., and three a member of Galilee Missionary Baptist grandchildren. Kenfield Pasadena' Avenue Chapel. Church.

Survivors include her husband Herbert; three sons, Herbert Zack- WILSON, JAMES 51, of 429 Seventh St. ery and Richard, and three daughters, Petersburg Beach, died Tuesday (Sept. 11, 1984). Born in Melody, Debbie and Johnson, Philadelphia, he came here in 1977 from Levittown, N.Y., all of St. Petersburg; hernatther Queen where he was a carpenter for NBC of New York.

SurviEsther Burney, New York City; a broth- include his mother Hazel Houlihan, St. Petersburg er Eugene Burney, St. Petersburg; two Beach; two daughters, Melissa and Margaret Wilson, and sisters, Kathleen Brown, St. Petersburg, three sons, Kevin, Timothy and Jamie, all of Levittown, and Paulette Burney, New York City, and three grand- and a brother William Long Beach, Calif. Kenfield children.

Creal Funeral Home. Beach Memorial Chapel. BirthsST. ANTHONY'S HOSPITAL pounds 12 ounces or 3.5 kilograms, 11:08 p.m., Sept. 10.

Mark and Julie Skonetski, 645 45th Ave. a girl, Chester and Judith Price, 926 48th Ave. a boy, 9 pounds 11 ounces or 4.4 kilograms, 11:10 a.m. Sept. 10.

9 pounds 13 ounces or 4.5 kilograms, 3:27 a.m. Sept. 11. Alfred Frances Klatz, 1184 24th Ave. a Scott and Cynthia Traylor, 8400 49th a boy, 6 pounds 10 ounces or 3 kilograms, 5:39 p.m.

Sept. 10. boy, 7 pounds ou ounces or 3.3 kilograms, 6:07 a.m. Sept. Barry and Virginia Carlson, 6921 59th Way 11.

Pinellas Park, a boy, 8 pounds 5 ounces 3.8 kilograms, David and Shelly Price, 4310 78th Way a girl, 6 12:20 p.m. Sept. 11. pounds 5 ounces or 2.9 kilograms, 6:55 a.m. Sept.

11. Fran Hill, 626 11th Ave. a girl, 6 pounds 7 ounces BAYFRONT MEDICAL CENTER or 2.9 kilograms, 10:02 a.m. Sept. 11.

Debra Doying, 2575 Grove Park Ave. a girl, 8 pounds 3 ounces or 3.7 kilograms, 6:03 a.m. Sept. 6. OTHERS Christian and Janis Warren, 682 Roser Park Spec.

4 Harold and Ronnie Anderson BabDrive a boy, 8 pounds 10 ounces or 3.6 kilograms, 9:41 cock, formerly of St. Petersburg, a boy, 8 pounds 9 p.m. Sept. 10. ounces or 3.9 kilograms, a.m.

Sept. in Pforgheim, James and Carol Percy, 666 NW Blvd. a boy, 7 Germany. Deaths elsewhereSamuel Bert, 88, the man credited with inventing David B. Shakarian, 70, whose yogurt and sandthe snow cone ice machine, died Sunday in Dallas.

Mr. wich shop grew into one of the nation's largest health- obituaries Bert was a fixture at the State Fair of Texas years. Nick Bert said his fater invented a machine to mechanically scrape ice for snow cones in the late 1920s. Jerome C. Hunsaker, 98, an aviation pioneer who in 1914 founded the nation's first course in aeronautical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), died Monday in Boston.

Mr. Hunsaker designed the NC-4, which in 1919 became the first aircraft to cross the Atlantic, and supervised development of the Shenandoah, the nation's first rigid airship. He also supervised the design of other dirigibles and was a leader in establishing a scientific and mathematical basis for the theory of flight. His association with MIT began in 1912, and he remained at the school as a student, instructor and professor even after his formal retirement from the faculty in 1952. food businesses, General Nutrition Inc.

(GNC), died Tuesday in Pittsburgh. Mr. Shakarian had stepped down as chief executive officer of the company in February, but remained chairman of the board. Mr. Shakarian opened his first store in 1935.

His original storefront is now one of about 1,200 GNC retail outlets that contributed to 1983 sales of nearly $375-million. James "Trummy" Young, 72, a Big Band Era trombonist and singer, died Monday in San Jose, Calif. Mr. Young was the way back to his home in Honolulu after a recent concert appearance in Denver and stopped to visit friends San Jose, where he became ill and was hospitalized Friday. The popular Dixieland musician gained fame as a vocalist and trombonist with the Jimmie Lunceford and Louis Armstrong bands in the 1940s.

Mr. Young's biggest personal hit was "Margie," which he recorded in 1938. update of Developments continuing in interest stories Toll collectors would collectors help A reduce merit pay embezzlement plan for in toll Florida's highway toll booths, said a State Department of Transportation (DOT) official who is proposing the U.S. won't press charges measure. Chris Speer, inspector general for DOT, said Monday in Tallahassee that her proposal would award against Miami officer extra pay to toll collectors who consistently match their toll intake with traffic estimates.

definitely in fatal Overtown shooting feasible in tying (pay) to their performance," Speer The federal government has decided not to press said. charges against a police officer whose fatal shooting of a young black man sparked riots in Miami's mostly Jacksonville fire A giant gasoline tank fire black Overtown section. "There is no basis for federal that cost Jacksonville $264,422 to extinguish has the prosecution" because there was no evidence that city's fire division scrambling for emergency funds. officer Luis Alvarez violated the civil rights of Nevell Expenses of battling the fire put the department Johnson Jr. in the Dec.

28, 1982 shooting at an $150,000 in the red, said budget officer Joe Strasser. Overtown video arcade, U.S. Attorney Stanley Marcus Although a new budget year begins Oct. 1, Strasser said Tuesday in Miami. A federal investigation began told the mayor's budget committee on Monday that a day after the shooting to see whether Alvarez had the department must have more money to meet its violated Johnson's civil rights when he fatally shot bills.

The Aug. 18 fire leveled a 1.9-million-gallon tank him while frisking him in the arcade. Both the half full of unleaded gasoline before it was put out. shooting and Alvarez's acquittal by an all-white jury six months ago sparked several days of civil disturbances in which one person was killed and 26 Navy death The Navy has decided to injured. court-martial a petty officer charged with the murder of a shipmate whose death had been ruled a suicide.

Charges against Petty Officer 2nd Class Bruce Riley had been dropped when the Sept. 19, 1983 death of Copter crash The Navy acknowledges that Sidney Kirkendall was declared a suicide. But Rear of crewmen aboard the submarine tender Adm. Allan G. Paulson, the region's ranking naval dozens Frank Cable witnessed the fatal April crash of an Air officer, has ruled Riley should be tried in Kirkendall's Force helicopter 50 miles east of Cape Canaveral but death.

Kirkendall was shot in the head in the armory unable to persuade their superiors to launch a of the cruiser Dale. were search for more than half an hour. However, the lengthy internal report released Tuesday said the five Child-abuse hearing Gov. Bob Graham men who died in the April 7 crash could not have been announced Tuesday that a panel created to hear saved even if the search had started immediately. The testimony on child abuse at Florida -care centers Orlando Sentinel obtained a copy of unclassified will hold it first hearing in Dade County, where sections of the 380-report and published details of it incidents reported at an unlicensed babysitting Tuesday.

The chopper had been providing support service sparked statewide concern. Graham and other on for a Trident missile test launch from a submarine panel members will hear testimony Saturday from when it crashed into the Atlantic. The crash occurred day -care workers, parents and others wishing to about 15 minutes before the missile launch, and discuss the issue of child abuse. Allegations of child earlier statements by civilians abuse at the Country Walk Babysitting Service in the crew accounts support aboard the ship that many people saw the crash but Dade County prompted Graham last month to could not get anyone to delay the launch or speed up consider a special legislative session aimed at the rescue. introducing tougher child -protection measures.

Former U.S. Rep. Jerry Voorhis, the man Nixon defeated in 1946 to start his political career United Press international CLAREMONT, Calif. Former Democratic U.S Rep. Jerry Voorhis, the man Richard Nixon defeated in 1946 to launch his political career, died Tuesday of emphysema.

He was 83. Mr. Voorhis died at the medical unit of Claremont Manor, a retirement home where he and his wife Louise had lived since 1972. Mr. Voorhis, a New Deal Democrat, had served five terms for Southern California's 12th District when Nixon, an attorney just out of the Navy, defeated him.

Four years later, Nixon gave up his House seat to oust Democratic Sen. Helen Gahagan Douglas, and in 1952 Dwight Eisenhower chose him as his vice presidential running mate. IN AN INTERVIEW 12 years ago, Mr. Voorhis said his defeat put Nixon on the road to the White House. "If he hadn't defeated me then, he'd never have received another chance to run for political office." During the bitter 1946 campaign, Nixon persuaded many voters that his opponent was supported by Communists and was a subversive, charges that Mr.

Voorhis hotly denied. "Nixon turned out to be the subversive," Mr. Voorhis said after the Watergate scandal that drove Nixon out of the White House. "He was trying to turn the United States into a virtual dictatorship, and I think he was going to do it through an appeal to the so-called silent majority," Mr. Voorhis said.

Mr. Voorhis never forgot the details of the bitter race he lost by 15,592 votes and in 1974 said he thought he "let Former U.S. Rep. Jerry Voorhis died Tuesday in Claremont, Calif. He was 83.

1973 the country down by not getting elected" in 1946. "I'M SORRY AND repentant about it," he said. "But that's not important any more. I think at last the moral sense of the nation and Congress has caught up with what has been going on in the most immoral and corrupt government this country has ever seen." Mr. Voorhis was one of many Democrats who were swept out of office because of the changing mood of America after World War II.

'After 15 years of solid Democratic control, the Republicans swept both houses of Congress. Mr. Voorhis did not seek office again after his defeat but remained active in local politics and community projects until his death. -sunrise DIGEST Around Florida According to county records, McKethan didn't pay an $1,122 road assessment until 1980. three years after Rescuers cut hole in wall he was supposed to begin paying on the bill.

County to move 600-pound woman Commission candidate Mary Ann DeWitt and her husband Bob didn't write a check to pay road Relatives of an ailing Sanford woman weighing nearly 600 pounds cut out part of a wall in their home so assessments they to county owed the until last month. That is seven years after the couple could have rescue workers could extract her from the building and take her to the Because of her and her paid the assessment amount in full, or six years after hospital. weight illness, Altamease 54, could walk be they were supposed to begin paying in yearly Cherry, not or installments. "You can 1 forget things. I forgot a about carried out of her home.

Family members cut the between windows in it," DeWitt said. The county may be in for even bigger partition two Cherry's bedroom, headaches there will be 10 times as many bills to creating a 4-by-5-foot hole. Rescue workers placed wooden the hole, slide that led collect this year. planks at creating a to the ambulance door. The woman, still in bed, was lifted by the sheets onto a tarpaulin and was Woman gets award from rooster shimmied down the slide onto the ambulance floor.

With some help from the mayor of Seminole on Miss Cherry was in serious but improved condition at Tuesday, a rooster thanked a woman for not being a Florida Hospital-Altamonte on Tuesday, suffering chicken. Blackie the rooster was a regular at Seminole from kidney malfunction and shortness of breath. City Park for seven until he was attacked by a years Scottish terrier. Ethel Tubergen, wife of City Council Along the Suncoast pulled president the Clarence off the Tubergen, wounded joined bird. the fray and Blackie dog Tuesday, Police officer sues citizen officially thanked his rescuer.

Mel Rackett, the city's over injury in line of duty superintendent of public works, took Blackie's right foot and pressed it on a stamp pad. Then Rackett A Clearwater police officer who says he was injured pressed the foot on the certificate of appreciation. The while chasing a car thief has sued the owner of a gas station from where the car was stolen. He the certificate was presented to Mrs. Tubergen Tuesday says in protecting the car against night bravery.

"for notorious owner was negligent theft. The suit is considered unusual in that the officer is suing for an injury suffered in the line of duty. The Life sentence urged in murder case city of Clearwater carries health insurance and A jury recommended Tuesday that Terry Van Royal Jr. workers' compensation on its employees. The suit be sentenced to life in prison for his role in killing three was filed Tuesday in Pinellas Circuit Court by Al and men in the High Point area two years ago.

Pinellas Jaclyn Kronschnabl against Manuel Kastrenakes, who Circuit Judge Fred Bryson Jr. will consider the owns Clark's Gulf Service Station at 2001 Drew St. recommendation when he sentences Royal on Oct. 19. Royal, 21, of Citrus County, faces a sentence of County has tardy taxpayers either life in prison or death in the electric chair.

He Hernando County has had its problems with people was convicted in August of three counts of who don't pay their special assessments and some first-degree murder in connection with the June 18, of the tardy are some of the county's most prominent 1982 shotgun deaths of Steven Fridella, Bobby Ray residents. "I had to bug Alfred McKethan," said Martindale and Gary Alan Peterson. Two other men Karen Nicolai, county finance director, referring to the convicted in the killings have been sentenced to death chairman of the board of Hernando State Bank. and a third is awaiting sentencing. Man who helped cancer -ridden wife kill herself is given probation United Press International VERO BEACH An elderly man who attracted widespread attention when he confessed to helping his cancer-ridden wife commit suicide was sentenced to one year of probation by a judge who said the man had suffered enough.

"The gentleman has gone through some severe problems," Indian River County Circuit Judge L. B. Vocelle said Monday before sentencing 67- year -old retired engineer Charles Vander Erve. "He needs help and needs to get himself involved. I think the sentence was structured to be as much help to him as I could." VOCELLE SAID the ruling was designed more to save Vander Erve's life than punish him for helping his wife of 42 years take hers.

Vocelle also ordered Vander Erve to turn in any guns from his substantial collection of firearms. He also instructed Vaner Erve to continue psychiatric treatment and perform 40 hours of community service. Vander Erve was charged with Police identify man St. Petersburg Times Staff Writer A 39-year-old man who was stabbed death Sunday in an argument over a $20 bill was identified Tuesday as Douglas Berg, a Tampa man who police said had no perma- Funeral notices violating a little-used statute prohibiting "assisting in self-murder." He faced a maximum penalty of 15 years in prison. Joan Vander Erve, 61, an advertising executive diagnosed as having inoperable cancer, was found dead in her bed Feb.

23, 1982 in what was ruled a suicide by drug overdose. FOR MORE than two years, Vander Erve kept the details of his wife's death to himself. But on May 3 of this year, he phoned police and confessed he prepared the overdose of sedatives. Vander Erve said he sat by his wife's bedside while she ate the bitter paste and then helped put a plastic trash bag over her head. "He did it because he loved her," said defense attorney Paul Kanarek, "not because of any malice or ill Vander Erve's case received national attention from groups supporting euthanasia, the right to die a merciful death even by suicide.

Fewer than a half-dozen cases of a assisting in a suicide are reported nationally each year. killed in stabbing nent address. Berg was stabbed through the heart, apparently after an argument over a $20 deposit on an apartment, police said. A 41-year-old Tampa man was arrested Sunday and charged with stabbing Berg. Letters A good place to air your gripes or assert your opinions on today's important issues.

The St. Petersburg Times. CRUMP Raymond L. Sr, 52, of 8947-79 Avenue Seminole, died September 10, 1984. Funeral services will be held Wednesday (today) 7 PM at the SEMINOLE BEACH MEMORIAL CHAPEL, 5100 Seminole Rev.

Dr. Paul W. Kohler officiating. Interment private. SEMINOLE BEACH MEMORIAL 391-9907 DAHL Mrs.

Dorothy (Dot), 62, of 191 Lido St. Petersburg Beach, died Monday. Funeral services Friday, 7:30 PM, Kenfield Beach Memorial Chapel, (301 Corey Avenue), Rev. Truman Gottschalk officiating. ENGLEHART Harry Franklin 68, of 4186 Beach Drive SE, died September 10, 1984.

Memorial services will be held in the Chapel of Christ United Methodist Church, 1st Avenue and 5th Street Thursday, September 13, at 2 PM with Dr. David Horton and Rev. David Lindsay officiating. In lieu of flowers, donations may be to Christ United Methodist Church Memorial Fund. WILHELM-THURSTON FUNERAL HOME JONES Charles Joseph.

Funeral services, 11. AM Chapel, 1045-9 Avenue with Rev. BiN Wright Saturday, from David C. Gross Ninth Avenue officiating. Interment will follow at Lincoln Ceme- tery.

DAVID C. GROSS FUNERAL HOME NINTH AVENUE CHAPEL 822-2024 KENT Frank 34, of 4961-10 Avenue passed away Monday, September 10, 1984. Friends will be received Thursday, September 13, one hour prior to Service time 2 PM at R. LEE WILLIAMS FUNERAL HOME, 3530-49 Street with Rev. J.W.

Cate, officiating. Interment will follow in Memorial Park Cemetery. Family requests in lieu of flowers donations be made to the St. Petersburg Free Clinic. STAWARKY Vivian 70, of 11098-111 Street Seminole, died Monday September 10, 1984.

Survivors: niece Marianne Myslicki of Largo; brother Charles Semenetz of South Sales, N. 2 sisters Margaret Burton and Marion Yedowitz, both of Pinellas Park. A Funeral Mass will be Friday, September 14, at 9:30 AM Blessed Sacrament Roman Catholic Church, Rev. Father James witty, I.C., Celebrant. Entombment Calvary Catholic Cemetery.

Friends will be received Thursday 2-4 and 7-9 PM, Lewis W. Mohn Funeral Home, 9700 Seminole Blvd, where there will be a Wake Service at 7 PM. TAYLOR Bernadine of 201 Brightwater Clearwater, died September 10, 1984, Born in McPherson, Kansas, she came here in 1966 from California. Membership: Daughters of the Nile, Islam Temple, San Francisco, Cal. Survivor: Cousin Ruth Conway of Pasadena, Texas.

Visitation: Wednesday 2-4 and 6-8 PM at Moss Funeral Home, 802 N. Ft. Harrison Clearwater, with Service 10 AM Thursday at the Funeral Home, conducted by Elim Temple No. 76, Daughters of the Nile. Burial in McPherson, Kansas.

WHITE Mary A. Graveside services will be held at Royal Palm Cemetery Thursday, September 13, at 11 AM. KENFIELD PASADENA AVENUE CHAPEL Burial services with casket from $735. Simple a cremations from $345. Inflationproof pre-need plans.

Beautiful chapels, superior service. DAVID C. GROSS Funeral Homes Crematory 381-4911.

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