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Accomack County Schools to Implement New, Stricter Cell Phone Policy | Latest News | wboc.com
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(Town of Princess Anne)
We are pleased to announce The Town of Princess Anne now has Hometown Hero banners to give a living tribute to recognize and honor those who have served or serving the country in the United States Armed Forces. If you live in the 21853 zip code and would like to see your loved one honored on Somerset Avenue please click the link below to purchase your banner. Banners will be going up as early as November for Veterans Day. A special thank you to everyone who helped to bring this project to our community.
(View link below for schedule and permit applications:)
Waterfowl Hunting Schedule Set for Deal Island and Fairmount WMA Impoundments (maryland.gov)
Have you heard about gift card draining? It's a fraudulent scheme that preys on gift card purchasers and Maryland is now the first state to take legal action to diminish the practice.
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Maryland becomes first state to pass law against gift card draining - CBS News
You won't be seeing reporter Kristina DeRobertis again on WBOC-TV but she won't be far away. She'll be reporting and anchoring news on WRDE, the NBC affiliate based in Milton, De. Both stations are owned by Draper Media.
How old am I? Well, my family had a combine like the one pictured here.
Fortunately, my grandfather figured how to rig it to be pulled by a tractor instead of a team of mules. It did not have a grain tank to collect the corn, wheat or whatever; instead the grain came down a chute to a divider where the operator stood, holding a burlap bag on one side to be filled. When the bag was full a switch was thrown and the grain passed to the other side of the divider into another bag while the operator manually tied off the first bag and threw it down a tin slide to the ground.
After a full day harvesting it was not unusual to have 400 or 500 full bags of wheat on the ground, and we had to load them onto a wagon to take back to the barn before nightfall so it would not spoil. Of course barley and wheat were harvested in June or July so the temperatures were always a cozy 95 degrees or thereabouts. And to think we only had a bath once per week, usually on Saturday nights!
Your friend,
Slim
January, 1989
Salisbury Daily Times
November, 1884
Free Daily Press (Easton, Pa.)
February, 1939
The News Journal (Wilmington)
August, 1997
Salisbury Daily Times
Vessel built and launched at Pocomoke met doom in hurricane.
October, 1919
Baltimore Sun
October, 1921
Interviewer: Do you remember the Pocomoke (River) ever flooding?
Elmer: Yeah, when I was a boy and lived on Front Street. In 1915, I lived on
Front Street in Pocomoke, and the boats came right up by the house,
rowboats and things, could come right up by the house. That was the biggest
flood that I remember.
Interviewer: So it went up over Front Street?
Elmer: Yeah, over the street. Boats could come right up the street. Of course,
most of the vehicles then were horse and carriage. The horse would still go.
They didn’t like to go in the water, but they would.
Interviewer: Did you go to Public Landing?
Elmer: Yeah, that was mostly where we went for our summer parties and
things. It was outings for the day because it was safe swimming, and people
who couldn’t swim could still go in there. And also catch crabs. And it was
a...we didn’t have much money to spend and you could still have a good time
down there.
Interviewer: What kind of amusements did they have down there?
Elmer: They didn’t have very much; they had places you could buy
sandwiches and things like that. A restaurant or two. And then there was an
old hotel down there, but we didn’t go to that. We went out on the pier, got
sunburned, and bathed, and caught crabs, ate picnic lunches.
Interviewer: Did you ever go on the pier in Ocean City?
Elmer: Oh, yeah. You could fish from the pier. And then they had amusements
on this end. Still, I don’t know if it’s still there or not. You were allowed to fish
from it. It wasn’t really good fishing, not like the surf. You might catch one
now and then.
Interviewer: Did you go to Assateague?
Elmer: Well, at Assateague we fished on the beach for drum. And then, one
year we went deer hunting. There are only 2 of us left today that went on a
party. All the rest of them are dead. There were about 10 or 12. We went to
Public Landing and went across in a boat to Green Run Inlet, which was on
this end of Assateague then. There was another inlet was cut in there. And
we hunted deer all day over there, but we were not experienced in deer
hunting and they run ahead of us all the time. They cut around on the beach.
One of the Coast Guard told us that a deer ran up the beach, right aside of
you, and we looked and there were the footprints in the sand. And we
couldn’t see them because we were in the woods a little higher where they
run all the way back up. In other words, they run as far as the inlet and then
they could’ve jumped across and swam back across, but they knew we
couldn’t get down there and they run right back up the beach.
Interviewer: Do you remember Jake, an alligator in Ocean City? Or Snow Hill?
Elmer: No.
Interviewer: There was some guy who had an alligator he brought from
somewhere and had in a cage in Snow Hill.
Elmer: We had one at the fairgrounds for many, the old fairgrounds
Interviewer: an alligator?
Elmer: It may have escaped from the circus that was there or carnival, we
don’t know. But it was there for many years. I never saw him, but all the boys
seen him.
Interviewer: Where was he? He was in the wild?
Elmer: Right in the middle of the track. There was a low place down there and
they can bury in the mud. With the fauna and the type of vegetation we have,
we’re just like a swamp. We had alligators at one time.
Interviewer: When you were a child, what kind of home life did you have?
Elmer: Well, until I was 6 years old, we lived on a farm in Cokesbury. I went 6
months, the first half of the year, until Christmas, to the country school. Of
course, it was just a short distance and we walked. Church was right near the
school. The family went there on Sundays. We had just a crop and farm,
raising potatoes and corn.
Interviewer: What kind of chores did you have?
Elmer: Well, first thing we did was feed the chickens and pick up the eggs.
Bring the wood in and all that kind of stuff, firewood
Interviewer: Did you help plant?
Elmer: No, not then. But later on, when I moved in town, I was 6 years old, but
I spent 2 summers on my grandmother’s farm. And there I learned to do
everything. One summer when I was about 11, 11 or 12, I guess, I (learned) to
drive mules without cussing? and I (audio not clear) all day long, just like
everybody else. But the first year I was there, I was too small. They didn't let
me handle the team then.
(Continues next Saturday here at The Pocomoke Public Eye)
To be capable of driving a team of mules without cursing is quite an accomplishment as mules do not respond to reins but to words. If you think herding cats is hard driving a team of mules is 10 times harder.
Your friend,
Slim