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A funeral home in Findlay, Ohio. A funeral home, funeral parlor or mortuary is a business that provides burial and cremation services for the dead and their families. These services may include a prepared visitation and funeral, and the provision of a chapel for the funeral.
Count Gore de Vol is a television horror host who originally appeared on Washington, D.C.'s WDCA from 1973 to 1987. [1] Originally named M.T. Graves and played by announcer Dick Dyszel, the character first appeared on the WDCA version of the Bozo the Clown program.
The death care industry in the United States includes companies and organizations that provide services related to death: funerals, cremation or burial, and memorials.This includes for example funeral homes, coffins, crematoria, cemeteries, and headstones.
The Chicago native attended Southern Illinois University and graduated with a degree in radio-TV. He became the local Bozo the Clown at WDXR-TV in Paducah, Kentucky, before moving on to WDCA in Washington in 1972.
De Vol was born in Moundsville in Marshall County in northern West Virginia, and was reared in Canton, Ohio.His father, Herman Frank De Vol, was band-leader of the Grand Opera House in Canton, Ohio, [1] and his mother, Minnie Emma Humphreys De Vol, had worked in a sewing shop.
Riverside Memorial Chapel was founded as Meyers Livery Stable [2] in 1897 by Louis Meyers on Norfolk Street on the Lower East Side of Manhattan. In 1905, the business was relocated to 54 East 109th Street and the name was changed to Meyers Undertakers.
The community of Devol began in 1907, when the Wichita Falls and Northwestern Railway laid tracks through the area. A post office was established there on November 30, 1907.
Port-Glasgow Athletic was a football club based in Port Glasgow, Scotland.The club was formed in 1878 and originally named Broadfield before changing their name in 1881. They played in the Scottish Football League between 1893 and 1911, and were based at Clune Park.