Tuesday, July 22, 2014

Hertrich Ford Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram of Pocomoke

Contact:
Jennifer Rafter
Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce

For immediate release

Hertrich Ford Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram of Pocomoke Business After Hours July 24th and DEBUT OF THE NEW 2015 CHRYSLER 200

Join Hertrich and the Pocomoke Chamber of Commerce for a Business After Hours and Grand Re-Opening on July 24 from 5:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. Light refreshments will be served.  Have a chance to win exciting door prizes, meet old friends and new, and experience great networking opportunities with local business leaders. Chrysler Representatives will be in attendance for the DEBUT OF THE NEW 2015 CHRYSLER 200, showing from July 24-26. Stop by and join us for the Hertrich of Pocomoke Business After Hours and Grand Re-Opening on July 24 from 5:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m.  All are welcome and no RSVP is required.  Please call the Pocomoke Chamber of Commerce at 410-957-1919 for further information.

Monday, July 21, 2014

A waitress in a Chinese restaurant stunned diners

SORRY FOLKS I JUST HAD TO SHARE THIS ONE.



A waitress in a Chinese restaurant stunned diners by picking up a dead cockroach and eating it in front of them.
Jin Kuo, 39, got into a heated row with businessman Zhang Yen, 43, when he complained about finding the insect in a plate of salad.
Jin said it was 'perfectly normal' to find an cockroach in a restaurant and then, to prove her point, she swallowed it.
The bizarre incident happened atthe Jinsha Era Plaza hotel restaurant in Chengdu, the capital of central China's Sichuan province.
Scroll down for video

One of the people who was with Zhang as a guest grabbed his mobile phone and started to video the incident.
The waitress was heard saying: 'No matter which restaurant you go to, you will always find cockroaches in the food. It is very normal.'


Enraged at her attitude, Zhang told her that if it was so normal, she should eat it to solve the problem, and then there would not need to any need to argue.
But to his amazement, that was exactly what the waitress did, picking the cockroach off the side of the plate and putting it into her mouth before swallowing it.




 Chinese waitress Jin Kuo ate a cockroach that was found by a customer in his salad

One of the people who was with Zhang as a guest grabbed his mobile phone and started to video the incident.
The waitress was heard saying: 'No matter which restaurant you go to, you will always find cockroaches in the food. It is very normal.'


Enraged at her attitude, Zhang told her that if it was so normal, she should eat it to solve the problem, and then there would not need to any need to argue.
But to his amazement, that was exactly what the waitress did, picking the cockroach off the side of the plate and putting it into her mouth before swallowing it.

 Jin grabbed it and ate it to prove that it was perfectly harmless, leaving businessman Zhang Yen, 43, stunned

 The waitress was heard saying: 'No matter which restaurant you go to, you will always find cockroaches in the food. It is very normal'
 The restaurant owner has apologized for the incident and said the waitress had been punished
 ____________________________________________________

Shocked Zhang was left speechless by what she had done, and had nothing more to say. Instead he opened up his wallet, paid the bill, and left, still shaking his head in amazement.
The restaurant owner meanwhile has apologised over the incident and said that the cockroach had probably crawled into the dish from outside while cooking.
She added that the waitress had been punished for not accepting the fault, and had been told she was going to get a pay cut for the foreseeable future to teach her lesson.
Commentators however who viewed the video on social media sites said the waitress should have been given a pay rise.
It is not the first time a staff member has tried to defuse a hygiene row by eating the evidence.
In May, a restaurant manager ate a condom after customers found it in their fish dish.
He had rejected their claim it was a condom and insisted it was a ring of calamari and ate it to prove the point.

Senator Jim Mathias "A beautiful day in Crisfield"

Dear Friend,

Wow! Another beautiful day was in store for those who attended the 2014 J. Millard Tawes Crab & Clam Bake yesterday. Although it's always quoted as being "the hottest day of the year," yesterday proved to breezy and very enjoyable. It was great to see so many of our friends and neighbors gathering together to talk about politics, the summer, and what's happening on the Eastern Shore as well as throughout Maryland. It was exceptionally great to do this all over crabs, corn, and all things that are truly the best in Crisfield and throughout the Eastern Shore.

Most importantly, I am particularly proud that the 38th Annual J. Millard Tawes Crab & Clam Bake is in my district, and that I am able to show all the great things we have to offer to our friends and neighbors from around the state. I'm grateful and I want to say thank you to all my supporters who came out to the event. I truly appreciate Team Mathias and all your efforts and energy as we continue working towards victory in November. Please reach out to your friends and neighbors to join our growing team. We work hard and have a lot of fun as we move our campaign forward.

Thanks,

Jim Mathias

P.S. Don't forget to R.S.V.P to my event August 15th. Information about the event can be found here.

Sunday, July 20, 2014

COMMUNITY ALERT: SHARE!!!!!!!!!



[Pocomoke City Police Department]

During the month of July 2014, there has been an increase in Theft from vehicles throughout the City of Pocomoke. Pocomoke City Police will be stepping up enforcement daily during the day and evening hours. 

Pocomoke City is a quiet suburban residential community and residents may become complacent about car security. I encourage residents to make sure you do not leave your keys in the ignition, the vehicle running and to keep your loose change, wallets, computers, headsets, etc. in plain view as these will be an enticement for a thief to enter your vehicle.

Often times, your homes' exterior lighting may too be dim or not in use. Overly tall shrubbery and other brush on the premises can provide thieves with the necessary cover they need to steal. Please stay vigilant for suspicious activity in your community and notify the Pocomoke City Police Department of suspicious activity.

Chief Kelvin D. Sewell

July 17, 2014

Pocomoke's Got Talent

If you have talent and would like to participate in our Pocomoke Idol on August 5, 2014 please email Angel Thornes at pcpdpolice@comcast.net.



Worcester County Maryland Library

Kyra Arnold won the Summer Reading Orioles Essay Contest. She will represent the Worcester County Library on the field at the game on August 3rd.




Costen House Museum


Pocomoke City Girl Scouts at Belle Beach, Public Landing 1936.


TIME MACHINE ... 1975, 1920, 1931, 1881, 1905

(Reader Friendly Viewing Of News Archive/Historical  Archive Material)

June, 1975
The Daily Mail (Hagerstown, Md.)

School paper's adviser removed in sex controversy

SNOW HILL, Md. (AP)-  A controversy here over an issue of the Snow Hill school newspaper devoted to sex education has forced the removal of the paper's adviser in the same week she received an award as Maryland's "newspaper adviser of the year."

Rebecca Dawson, a 29-year-old French teacher at the small Worcester County school, was selected by the Baltimore Sunpapers last week as the winner of the 1975 scholastic journalism award.  

She was replaced shortly thereafter as teacher-adviser for the Eagle because of what school principal Kelly Hunt Shumate described as community wrath over the May 1 issue, which contained research by the staff into birth control, contraceptives, and abortion.

An accompanying editorial called for sex education in the school system starting in the sixth grade to help prevent teenage pregnancies.

Shumate said "there has been a great deal of reaction" to the sex education articles in the community, and added if he had seen them before publication he would not have approved them.

The principal said it is Miss Dawson's contention that neither an adviser nor any other school official can ethically or legally censor a student newspaper.  But, he continued, an adviser can exert strong guidance without outright censorship.

William M. Bernard, who heads the Sunpaper's high school journalism awards program, described the Eagle as a paper "that provides a forum in which students can have a part when there is no other outlet."

"It has gone beyond being a bulletin board," he continued, "and has not been afraid to get into issues the students are interested in."

To prepare the sex education issue, six staff members interviewed doctors, a psychiatrist, social service and public health officials, teenage mothers, and two 16-year-old unwed fathers.     

Footnote:  Two months later the approaching new school year brought  a new development.  Read about it next Sunday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye.

March, 1920
The Washington Post

CRISFIELD PRAYS FOR TAX RELIEF

Believes Bills Would Kill Seafood Industries- Public Services Are Need

Crisfield, Md., March 21.-  Public prayer services were held in all the churches of Crisfield today, the ministers praying for the deliverance of their people from the hardships which they claim would be placed upon them by bills now in the legislature, which provide for increased taxes and lincenses on the different branches of the crab and oyster business.

For more than a week Crisfield has been alarmed by the prospect of what the majority of people say would be confiscatory  taxes on its one great industry- seafood.  Meetings of the protest have been held nightly.

The taxing measures are those which are backed in the legislature by the conservation commission and provide increased legislation fee on oysters, increased crabbers' license, increased oyster tongers' license and the placement of a shipment tax on hard and soft-shelled crabs. 

July, 1931
The Denton Journal

(Excerpts)

No Depression In Del-Mar-Va

That the Del-Mar-Va Peninsula will not admit that it is being "depressed by depression," will be broadcast to the nation next Sunday in the National Baloon Races, to be held at Akron, Ohio, where the Del-Mar-Va Peninsula will be represented by an entry.

Official announcement has been made at headquarters of The Del-Mar-Va Eastern Shore Association Monday that all arrangements for the Del-Mar-Va baloon to compete in the national race have been completed.  The baloon will be supplied by the Goodyear-Zeppelin Corporation, of Akron, Ohio, of standard racing size and especially equipped.

The primary purpose of the Del-Mar-Va Peninsula being represented in this event is to call attention to the fact that the Peninsula is one agricultural section which has withstood the recent unfavorable conditions in a sound manner and is facing the future most optimistically.

The Del-Mar-Va baloon will carry printed on each side, "Del-Mar-Va, the Peninsula of Plenty," the original slogan of the Del-Mar-Va Association when it was formed six years ago. Literature will be distributed by the pilots while the baloon is enroute.  It will include an invitation to visit and investigate Del-Mar-Va.

The entry of the Del-Mar-Va baloon has been made possible by the contributions of approximately twenty business leaders throughout the Peninsula who have accepted a pro rata share of the expense entailed.

Officials of the Del-Mar-Va Association feel that undoubtedly every citizen on the Peninsula will be interested in following this event and its outcome. It will undoubtedly be covered by radio broadcast. 

September, 1881 (Time Machine archive)
(Denton Journal)

Water Ten Cents A Gallon.-  Owing to the extremely dry weather of the past month the stock of water on hand in Crisfield has been entirely consumed.  The demand is now supplied from the Princess Anne wells .  It is brought down by the Eastern Shore Railroad Company and dealt out to the eager purchasers at ten cents per gallon.- Crisfield Leader.

July, 1905
(Peninsula Enterprise- Accomac Court House)

(Ad)

Sample Rooms.  Steam Heat.  Hot & Cold Water Bath Rooms.

Parker House,

A. Parker, Prop'r.

C.E. Towsend's Livery Attached.  Pocomoke City, Md.

All Kinds of High Grade Whiskies & Wines.  Sold by the gallon, quart and pint.   

Send Postoffice Money Order or Check with order and your address and Package will be shipped by First Train.


In 1902 The Times of Washington, D.C. published a full page feature article on "...the quaint island of Tangier, an island that is without a counterpart in this country."  It gave a most timely and interesting description of the Tangier Island of 112 years ago and the daily life of its citizens.  Beginning next Sunday we'll be posting a portion of this article each week.  


Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about?  It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish.   Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!



"Somewhere over
the Rainbow
Bluebirds fly..."

Flying on for JMMB

Team Britt's Support Our Troops Project

T shirts! Get your t shirts and bracelets! Have a lottt, really need to sell them guys! Would love to do a new design but we must sell these first! They are 15 dollars. Currently have all sizes. If you are far away, you can send a check and I will ship!! Or I can meet up with you, or you can get from enchanted florist if I know ahead of time. That is also where donations are accepted! Thank you! T shirts are 15 and bracelets are 20. Half goes to the project! ! Contact me to order yours today!





We reached 350 likes today! That's great for our little area. The project has grown a lot and I am very thankful for that. We've reached so many troops. Thank you. Have whole box of shirts that need to go!! $15 and half goes to the project, I'd love to do a new design but not until these are gone! Help us sell them and spread the word. Don't forget letters can be done all year and donations can be dropped off at enchanted florist, hygiene products and snacks that won't melt, drink mixes, and really anything is great, money is great too to purchase items we are lacking or for shipping one box at 15 dollars! Thank you! Feel free to share posts and the page to spread the word more.

Saturday, July 19, 2014

229th Maryland Army National Guard Band had a great turn out tonight!

From the Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce 



From The Pocomoke Public Eye; Thank you for your service. 
























Pocomoke Horizons Summer Academy. The Art Academy students painted windows in downtown Pocomoke.

Thank you Pocomoke High School Warriors Horizons Summer Academy! You did a wonderful job making Downtown Pocomoke look beautiful!




What do YOU want to see next?



Help us out! I've been researching for a new movie, but nothing jumps out! What do YOU want to see next?
Here are the typical guidelines:
It's release time was 6-8 weeks from the show date. So, it had to be released between mid June and early July.
Must be something that a ton of people want to see!
I always take in audience feedback, chart ratings, and IMDB ratings, but this round has me stumped! HELP!

CLICK [HERE] TO VISIT THE MARVA FACEBOOK PAGE

Join us at Brown Dog Ice Cream and meet some SPCA alumni!


SPCA Eastern Shore Virginia

Pawsome news! Michelle's adoption was finalized today. Here’s Michelle going home with her new sisters Emma & Kaley. We are so happy for all!

www.shorespca.com

Join the MarVa Theater for "Drop Dead Juliet"

Each year, the MarVa Theater in Downtown Pocomoke City holds a theater academy for students who like to enjoy the summer time acting in different plays, and learning more about theater and acting.  This year, the Advanced Theater Academy group is performing "Drop Dead Juliet" this Friday, July 25th during the Art Stroll at 5:00pm.  Tickets are $5 for adults, $3 for kids.  The Theater Academy students will be also be performing the musical portion of the academy, "Totally Awesome 80's" on August 15th at 3:00pm.  Come out and enjoy this awesome play, and support your local children's talent at your local theater!

THE POCOMOKE PUBLIC EYE NEEDS YOUR LOCAL KNOWLEDGE

Our beloved Brenda (JMMB) believed that we all have a Guardian Angel, she even knew the name of hers. She made me promise to keep PPE alive, and the people informed and "KEEP IT POSITIVE" she would say and find someone to take her place, (that will never happen) I believe that we have a Guardian Angel now, and I know 'her' name just Like Brenda knew hers. So with much regret in my heart I ask.    

We are looking for someone that loves our area that would like to meet interesting people, make new friends, and see new places. It really doesn't take much time but you must enjoy what you'd be doing. Of course a phone and camera are the most used tools minus the computer. If you think you'd like to be a investigator, reporter, publisher and would like to give it a try please contact me on facebook or my email address on the right of the PPE Blog 

This is a position ideal for someone that has spare time that they would like to fill with fun and doesn't mind volunteering to keep or community informed on all the local happenings and events and also show future visitors and tourist all the hidden treasures of downtown Pocomoke. Actually if you are active and visit local events, meetings, etc. anyway then it takes very little time, a few pictures and then typing your experience of that event on PPE and that's it.

Thanks
Tom

Thursday, July 17, 2014

TIME MACHINE ... This Sunday's Preview.

1975.. Snow Hill High School's newspaper stirs controversy with sex education articles and editorial; 1920.. Crisifield churches hold prayer services for tax relief;  1931.. Delmarva promotes itself in National Baloon Races; 1881.. Water in short supply, sellling for as much as ten cents a gallon; 1905.. Ad advises of Pocomoke City's Parker House offerings.

Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye!  


Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about?  It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish.   Send to  tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!

Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Hertrich July 24 Business After Hours Press Release

Contact:
Jennifer Rafter
Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce

For immediate release

Hertrich Ford Chrysler Dodge Jeep Ram of Pocomoke Business After Hours July 24th and DEBUT OF THE NEW 2015 CHRYSLER 200

Join Hertrich and the Pocomoke Chamber of Commerce for a Business After Hours and Grand Re-Opening on July 24 from 5:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m. Light refreshments will be served.  Have a chance to win exciting door prizes, meet old friends and new, and experience great networking opportunities with local business leaders. Chrysler Representatives will be in attendance for the DEBUT OF THE NEW 2015 CHRYSLER 200, showing from July 24-26. Stop by and join us for the Hertrich of Pocomoke Business After Hours and Grand Re-Opening on July 24 from 5:00 p.m.-7:00 p.m.  All are welcome and no RSVP is required.  Please call the Pocomoke Chamber of Commerce at 410-957-1919 for further information.

Sunday, July 13, 2014

TIME MACHINE ... 1907, 1870, 1914, 1991, 1933, 1943

(Reader-friendly viewing of news archives/historical archives material)

August, 1907
The Washington Post

QUICK WIT SAVES TRAIN

Red Handkerchief Around a Lantern Signals Flyer

HALTS SIX FEET FROM DANGER

Horse, with Unconscious Driver, attempts to Cross Bridge Over Humphrey's Lake and Falls Through Ties. Salisbury Officer Stops Exposition Express from Plunging Into the Water.

Special to The Washington Post.

Salisbury, Md., Aug. 12.-  With a red handkerchief held in front of an ordinary lantern, Officer James Crouch, of this city, held up the Exposition Flyer on the New York, Philadelphia and Norfolk Railroad to-night and prevented a wreck on the long bridge over Humphrey's Lake, saving probably several hundred lives.

The officer was notified that a horse and buggy had attempted to cross over the bridge and the the horse had fallen between the ties.

Crouch realized that an awful accident would likely happen, as the express was due within a few minutes. He broke into the baggage room and secured a lantern.  After lighting it he made his way up the railroad track to the bridge and found a horse and buggy about twelve feet from the end of the bridge.

The officer took his red handkerchief from his pocket, wrapped it around the lantern, and waved the signal before the approaching train, which by this time was coming rapidly toward him.

The engineer saw the signal, applied the emergency brakes and stopped the train within six feet of the horse and carriage. The train crew found Lemuel Brittingham, a resident of this city, in the carriage, and it was with difficulty that he was aroused and told of the dangerous position.

The position of the buggy and horse was such that would have caused almost certain derailment, and had such been the case the entire train, consisting of Pullman sleepers, would have fallen into the water, a distance of thirty-five feet below.   

Footnote:  Salisbury's Humphrey's Lake extended from just east of the Court House through what is now the City Park.  The dam containing the lake burst in 1909, leaving a large swampy area. The dam originally had been constructed in connection with a grist mill operation.

April, 1870 
(Maryland State Archives)

Proceedings and Acts of the General Assembly, 1870

AN ACT to change the name of the town of Sandy Hill, in the Eighth Election District of Worcester County, to the name of Stockton.

Name changed

SECTION 1. Be it enacted by the General Assembly of Maryland, That the town of Sandy Hill, in the Eighth Election District of Worcester County, is changed, and shall hereafter be known and called by the name of Stockton.

In force.

Sec. 2. And be it enacted, That this Act shall take effect from the date of its passage.

Approved. April 4, 1870.

February, 1914
The Times-Dispatch (Richmond, Va.)

The Pocomoke City National Bank has offered $90 to be divided Into three| prizes-$50, $25, $15-as an incentive to the boys of Accomac County, Virginia, and Worcester and Somerset Counties, Maryland, to join a Boy's Corn Club. The prizes are to be awarded tor the largest yield of ears per acre. The boy will be required to do all the work pertaining thereto, from the breaking up of the land to the husking of the corn. Mr. Chilton, Accomac County demonstrator, has visited ten schools in this county and has now a club membership of 100.

January, 1991

Bill Riordan, the former Salisbury businessman who became a well-known figure in the tennis world, died at the age of 71 in Naples, Fla.  Riordan managed the early career of Jimmy Connors and was instrumental in bringing the men's National Indoor Tennis Championships to Salisbury from 1964-1976, as well as supporting youth tennis opportunities.  

February, 1933
(Hattiesburg American- Hattiesburg, Miss.)

Mr. and Mrs. Linn Benton Hostetler announce the marriage of their daughter, Mary Lynn, to Mr. Verlin C. Krabill at Elkton, Md., February, 10, 1933.  Mr. and Mrs. Krabill will make their home at Pocomoke City, Maryland, where Mr. Krabill is principal of the high school.

1943 (Time Machine archive)

As a young Navy pilot former President George H.W. Bush trained at  the Chincoteague base.  As reported in various published accounts he flew low over an area of Crisfield where a circus had setup nearby and a frightened elephant broke away, in turn frightening nearby residents.  Reports were that Bush's low fly-over was an attempt to impress a young Crisfield woman he had met at a USO dance at Chincoteague. 

Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about?  It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish.   Send to  tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!



"Somewhere over
the rainbow 
Bluebirds fly..."

Flying on for JMMB

Saturday, July 12, 2014

TIME MACHINE ... This Sunday's Preview

1907.. Red handkerchief around a lantern averts a local train disaster; 1870.. Name change for a Worcester County community; 1914.. Pocomoke City bank offers "Corn Club" boys cash prizes; 1991.. Losing a local tennis icon; 1943.. Who was that young navy pilot whose low fly-over frightened a circus elephant in Crisfield?; 1933.. Pocomoke's high school principal to marry.

Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye!  


Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about?  It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish.   Send to  tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!

Friday, July 11, 2014

Pocomoketoberfest Beer, Wine and Art Festival- Saturday, September 6th, noon to 6 pm Cypress Park, Pocomoke




Yes, just like Germany, we are holding our ‘Oktoberfest’ in September to kick off the harvest season! Taste the Eastern Shore at this wine and beer festival.  Bring your lawn chairs and blankets and get ready to enjoy the day on shore of the scenic Pocomoke River. Early Bird Admission is just $20 and includes a wine or beer glass and tastings. Admission at the gate is $25 or for designated driver is just $5. Listen to live music while you sample, play games, and enjoy shopping with local artists. New this year will be Plein Air Pocomoke. Watch artists bring a canvas to life before your eyes in historic Downtown Pocomoke on Friday and in conjunction with Pocomoketoberfest on Saturday.  For more information contact pocomokechamber@gmail.com or 410-957-1919 or see Pocomoketoberfest.com.

Thursday, July 10, 2014

Pocomoke Plein Air Press Release

Contact: Jennifer Rafter
Pocomoke Chamber of Commerce

For immediate release

Pocomoke Plein Air
September 5th and 6th, 2014

Come paint outdoors along the scenic Pocomoke River and in the beautiful downtown area of Pocomoke City, MD in a relaxed and informal atmosphere. In conjunction with Pocomoketoberfest, The Pocomoke Chamber of Commerce is sponsoring Pocomoke Plein Air on Friday and Saturday, Sept. 5 & 6th!  If you haven’t tried plein air painting before, this is the perfect opportunity to experience it. This is simply a fun opportunity to enjoy painting outdoors with a group of other artists. Beginners as well as seasoned painters are welcomed. Discounted Pocomoketoberfest tickets are available with plein air registration. The judged competition on Saturday is optional for registered painters.  For more information please contact pocomokechamber@gmail.com or 410-957-1919 or check out www.Pocomoketoberfest.com.

Jennifer Rafter
Executive Director
Pocomoke Area Chamber of Commerce
www.pocomoke.com
410-957-1919


 

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Concert In The Park


July is Independent Retailer Month


  A dollar spent at an independent retailer is usually spent 6 to 15 times before it leaves the community. From $1, you create $5 to $14 in value within that community. Shopping with an independent retailer supports local traders, their suppliers and the people they depend on to run their businesses. Buying from an independent retailer boosts your local economy, rebuilding confidence in the community, enabling local businesses to prosper and grow.

For more information see independentretailermonth.com

Sunday, July 6, 2014

TIME MACHINE... 1915, 1926, 1957, 1852,1944, 1938

(Reader-friendly viewing of newspaper archives/historical archives material)

November, 1915
The Washington Post

5,000 SEE MAN HANGED

Execution of Frank Grano in Woods at Snow Hill.

MANY CAMP THERE ALL NIGHT

Spectators Orderly But no Effort is Made to Hide Scene of Hanging from Huge Crowd- Paid  Penalty for Murder of Mr. and Mrs. Robinson and Alonzo Redden.

Special to The Washington Post.

Snow Hill, Nov. 26-  Trembling from hand to foot , but nerved before the ordeal, Frank Grano stood on the top step at the Worcester County jail and said "Good-by, boys," to the 500 persons who had gathered to see his departure for the place of execution.

He was executed at 9:15 o'clock.

At an early hour he partook of a slight breakfast and drank some coffee.  By 7 o'clock all arrangements for the execution had been made within the jail.   

Spectators began to arrive at Snow Hill as early as 9 o'clock last night, and from that hour until the time of execution there was almost a continuous passing of automobiles and all kinds of horse-drawn vehicles through Snow Hill.

Three hundred and ninety-six automobiles were counted in the woods adjacent to the execution. The Berlin state road was lined with automobiles and neighboring farmyards were the resting places of many more.

A conservative estimate placed the number of people who viewed the hanging and those around the courthouse at Snow Hill at 5,000. Many camped in the woods during the night, and the glare from the numerous camp fires presented a weird experience at an early hour this morning- it resembled a large detention camp.

This resemblance was made more realistic by the presence of women and children. During the night some campers would sing parts of a familiar hymn. The authorities saw early in the week that any attempt to exclude the public from witnessing the hanging would cause trouble, hence no precaution was taken to build a fence around the gallows and make the execution private. The crowd this morning did not interfere with the proceedings in any way. 

On September 6 Grano shot and killed Mr. and Mrs. Levin P. Robinson and their farmhand, Alonzo Redden. He was jealous of the woman. 

December, 1926
The Denton Journal

(Excerpts)

THE CHESAPEAKE BAY BRIDGE

That It Will Pay From the Start Is Believed by Many Experts.

Indicating the need of a bridge across the bay, traffic authorities of the Eastern Shore estimate that 131,500 automobiles made the detour by way of Elkton across the Susquehanna river to Baltimore, during the year 1926.

This vehicular traffic originated from all points on the Eastern Shore of Maryland and Delaware. It is maintained that the erection of a bridge across Maryland's inland sea is a real need, and that the advent of motor traffic in larger volumes and the advancement of engineering knowledge, have brought this problem within the realm of practical business.

According to estimates just made public, the cost of taking a passenger automobile from Chestertown to Baltimore by way of ferry is $4.50; by way of Elkton and Havre de Grace, $5.10, while by way of the proposed bridge from Bay Shore to Rock Hall, it would be but $3.10. 

The scale of toll rates proposed by the Chesapeake Bridge Company, which corporation is expected to erect the bridge, and upon which the rates are based, are as follows: Passenger vehicles, §1.25; light trucks, §1.50; heavy trucks, $3; passengers, other than driver, 15 cents. These are said to be maximum tolls proposed. 

December, 1957
(The Kentucky New Era- Hopkinsville, Kentucky)

MARYLAND STATE IN ORANGE BLOSSOM BOWL

PRINCESS ANNE, Md. (AP)-  Coach Skip McCain heads for Miami tonight with a Maryland State football squad seeking revenge against Florida A&M in the Orange Blossom Bowl.

Three years ago, three Maryland State linemen were hurt and McCain had only 27 players to take to Miami.  Florida A&M romped to a 67-19 victory, by far the worst licking suffered  by McCain in 10 years. 

 This time, he'll be in better shape for Saturday's game with 33 hearty players.  His 10 year record is 73-7-3.

April, 1852
The Daily Dispatch (Richmond, Va.)

A Duel Prevented in Maryland. —Hon. Edward Long and the Hon. John W. Crisfield, both ex-members of Congress, and residents of Somerset county, Md., have been held to bail at Princess Anne to keep the peace, in the sum of $10,000 each, by Judge Spence, on the ground that a challenge had passed between them to fight a duel. It is said the affair grew out of a previous personal rencountre.

Footnote:  Attorney John W. Crisfield was the founder of Crisfield but he never lived there.  He resided in Princess Anne.

October, 1944

A 4-H Club member from Pocomoke City took top honors at the Sixteenth Annual Baltimore Stock Show.  The grand champion individual steer was an Aberdeen Angus raised by 18-year-old Ralph Lankford.

February, 1938 (Time Machine archive) 
(Uniontown Morning Herald- Uniontown, Pa.)

LETTER TRAVELS MANY MILES TO NEARBY VILLAGE

SNOW HILL, MD., Jan 31. (AP)-  For only three-cents, a letter travels 130 miles en route from Snow Hill to Girdletree- just seven miles away.

Here's how it works:

A Girdletree letter mailed here goes by a bus star mail route to Stockton- passing through Girdletree without a stop.  

Another bus takes it from Stockton to Pocomoke City to meet a northbound train.  

Train mail clerks unlock the pouch, sort the mail and toss the Girdletree letter into another pouch, which is tossed off the train to be picked up by a southbound train.

The pouch returns to Pocomoke City by train and another bus takes it to Stockton.

Another bus picks it up there and takes it four miles to Girdletree. 


Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about?  It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish.   Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!




"Somewhere over
the rainbow
Bluebirds fly..."

Flying on for JMMB

Saturday, July 5, 2014

The Tyrant’s Boot


by Delegate Mike McDermott

For every oppressed people who yearn for freedom, there is always a counting of the cost. Freedom is not free. A “Declaration of Independence” does not secure liberty, but it most certainly will secure the wrath of the tyrant who is deposed. This was certainly the case with King George.

Sadly, most Americans have never read our “Declaration of Independence”. They may know certain lines that are oft repeated, but many confuse our Constitution and the Declaration. In doing so, they miss the essence of our oppression and the need for our rebellion.

Together, the Founders declared certain truths that they held as “self evident” for all people to view and comprehend. They proclaimed as fact that “all men are created equal”. They understood that God is the giver of “rights” to people, and the best any government can do is recognize this truth.

Most of the Founders would pay dearly for making such a declaration. For stating that people were the sovereign of their lives and not the king was an act of treason. Many would die for signing their names to this document. Most lost their lands and saw their families exploited and made homeless. Our liberty cost them all they possessed.

A people can be held together by many things. Most will not last the test of time. There are vows and declarations that are sacred, oaths that we swear by, promises that we endeavor to keep; the American declaration of Independence is one of those God inspired commitments.

You may error in your thinking if you believe the price for freedom has already been paid. It must be paid by each generation of Americans. Our resolve as a people must remain as stalwart as that of the Founders lest a future tyrant catch us slumbering at the wheel of freedom.

It was always said to those who seemed on their way to making it big in this life: “Don’t forget where you came from!”  Many a starlet and ball player go on and forget this admonition at their own peril. It was President Reagan who reminded us that, “Freedom is a fragile thing and is never more than one generation away from extinction. It is not ours by inheritance; it must be fought for and defended constantly by each generation, for it comes only once to a people. Those who have known freedom and then lost it have never known it again.”

Today we celebrate our independence. May a tyrants boot never again find it’s place on the neck of any American, and may our people never forget the price of their freedom, so help us God!

TIME MACHINE ... This Sunday's Preview

1915.. 5,000 come to Snow Hill to see convicted murderer meet his fate; 1926.. Need for constructing a Chesapeake Bay Bridge being considered; 1957.. Princess Anne's Maryland State College is headed to a bowl game in Miami;  1852.. Duel between two prominent Somerset County men prevented; 1944.. Pocomoke City 4H-er takes top honors in Baltimore stock show; 1938.. It's just routine- a letter's long journey from Snow Hill to Girdletree.

Although you may not find all of these items in a history book, they are a part of our local history and you can read more about it this Sunday right here at The Pocomoke Public Eye. 

  

Do you have a local memory to share with PPE readers.. such as a big snow storm, a favorite school teacher, a local happening, something of interest your parents or grandparents told you about?  It can be just a line or two, or more if you wish.   Send to tkforppe@yahoo.com and watch for it on a future TIME MACHINE posting!

Friday, July 4, 2014

MY BIG GIRL


FIREMENS BBQ CANCELED FOR FRIDAY


Pocomoke City Vol. Fire Co. Annual Chicken Bar-B-Que
July 3, 4, 5 Route 13 South of Pocomoke City
1/2 Chicken <> Baked Beans <> Potato Salad <> Roll
$7.00 Adults <> $8.00 at the door
Tickets available from most Pocomoke Fire Co. Members
 and
First Shore Federal on Market St. - Pocomoke City.
Thank you for your support!














ATTENTION: Due to the impending severe weather we have canceled the BBQ for Friday. We plan to start back working on Saturday and may cook Sunday if supplies last. We'll keep you updated right here.