
PAGE TWENTY - MANCHESTER EVENING HERALD. Ma’ C h ester, Conn., Thurs.. July 13, 197B G a rd e n in g About town Jehovah’s Witnesses will have a theocratic school and t service meeting tonight at 7:30 at the Whiton Memorial By Frank Atwood Library auditorium, 100 N. Main St'. Manchester Composite Squadron of the Civil Air Patrol will meet tonight from 7 to 9:30 at Manchester State Ar­ iianrljPHtPr lEupiiing UpralJi mory, Main Street. Membership is open to all young peo­ ple from Grade 7 through high school. A Family NEWSpaper Since 1881 Mrs, Jerry Pehoviak began her herb garden with a shop, entered on the lower floor of the house, but leading Al-Anon family groups will meet tonight at 8 at the clump of chives. Now she has 68 kinds of herbs, most of also to a room upstairs. She has a permit from the town Pathfinders Club, 102 Norman St., and Friday at 10 a.m. Vol. XCVII, No. 241 — Manchester, Conn., Friday, July 14. 1978 them perennial, in the garden that she and her husband to operate a home business and regularly scheduled at the South United Methodist Church campus. The have developed on a steep slope behind their home in hours. They are 11 to 4 three days a week, Thursday, beginners group will meet tonight at 7:30, and Alateen for the 12- to 20-year-old children of problem drinkers will Tolland. Friday and Saturday. She may be in the garden during / The Pehoviaks bought a newly built house 13 years ago. these hours, rather than in the shop, but she promises not meet at 8 at the Pathfinders Club. The family groups are It fronts on Ridge Road and the land behind the house to be away from home. On other days she is at home by open to those affected by someone with a drinking drops sharply down into what was then untended woods. appointment. problem. Alcoholics Anonymous contact is available 24 They cut 50 trees and turned them into firewood. An artist first hours daily by calling 646-2355. Brooks named Then they needed a bulldozer and a backhoe, at expen­ Carter, Schmidt join An artist before she was an herb grower, Mrs. sive rentals, for three days, to remove stumps and some Pehoviak calls the shop her “studio." One sees an easel, large boulders and to grade the slope. brushes, tubes of paint and a number of finished pictures. There are now three terraces. One, near the top of the She works in oils, watercolors and acrylic, often with TOYIADIES police captain slope, is an informal herb garden. A second terrace, flowers as her subject. It has been her experience that Party Plan Needs Dealers In This Area To in condemning trials farther down, has a formal Elizabethan knot garden, “anything with flowers in it” is the first to be sold. The Show Toys & Gifts Now To Nov. Earn ‘50 Beds of plants are set off by wooden frames separated by first two customers at the shop bought paintings. or More An Evening. No Experience or Police Lt, Joseph H. Brooks has joining the Manchester Police wood-chip paths. At the bottom of the slope a nice lawn Mrs. Pehoviak is a member of the East Hartford Art been promoted to the rank of captain Department as a patrolman. He has By HELEN THOMAS continue peaceful relationships. But Carter was welcomed here with has been developed on a level area where family picnics Investment Needed. Call Collect (814) League, the Tolland County Art Association and the in the Manchester Police Depart­ an associate degree in criminal fiPI While lloiiHe Bepiirler our voice will not be stilled as we full pomp by West G erm any's are sometimes held. 266-8721. science from Manchester Communi­ Connecticut Society of Women Painters. ment detective division. BONN, West Germany (UPl) — consider these and other violations leaders at the start of a two-day stale The three levels are connected with steps made of ty College and has attended courses around the world." Mr. Pehoviak is a systems analyst with United The announcemnt of his promotion, President Carter and West German visit to this country as a curtain railroad ties set into ground. The bought 119 second-hand at the Arnold Markal law enforce­ Schmidt joined in “1 want to say I Technologies but has spent many hours helping to which will become effective Sunday, Chancellor Helmut Schmidt joined raiser to the summit. railroad lies at what was then a reasonable price. Ties develop the downhill garden. The house is equipped with ment school in New Haven. agree with every word the president PASKHILlJjlYiX was made this morning by Police today in condemning the trials of Schmidt, a dose friend of the are scarce today as most of our abandoned railroad has said, " electric heat but, with so many trees to be disposed of, (LOWSaSHOP Chief Robert Lannan. Active in community affairs. Soviet dissidents but said this will not United States, has been one of the tracks have been torn up, and the price might now be The two leaders met the press at the Pehoviaks bought two wood-burning stoves and still He was one of three top candidates Brooks is a member of Manchester deter their countries from continued severest critics of the Carter ad­ prohibitive. heat their home with these. The electric heat is turned on for the post. The names of the other Lodge of Elks and Manchester Lodge the Bonn chancellery after talks ministration's handling of economic iNuliirul look efforts to cooperate with Moscow in only occasionally to be sure it is in working order. SPECIAL top candidates, Lt. John Krinjak and of Masons. He is also a member of disarmament and other fields. ranging over a wide field from East- matters. Today he smiled warmly as When boulders were dug out of the slope they were The trees have all gone now for fuel, but the Pehoviaks Lt. Robert Guliano, will remain at several professional organizations, “We deplore this action," Carter West relations to the state of the they met, apparently determined to OF THE WEEK One of his favorite projects is the trucked away, except for one large boulder which the find an occasional friend who wants to have a tree cut-and the top of the promotion list for a said to reporters after a two-and-a- dollar and the weekend seven-nation rebut widespread reports they d*not “Jimmy Fund,” and he is one of the bulldozer operator, at Jeanne Pehoviak's request, pushed Jerry cuts tree and brings home the firewood in the truck year. This could be important if the half hour meeting with Schmidt. economic summit conference in get on well together. that the Pehoviaks have found very useful in their way of three coordinators of the Manchester which both will play leading roles. up hill for her informal garden. She wanted "a natural M PONS department decides to fill the now- Joseph I I . lirook.- “But at the same time we want to Carter conferred with Schmidt at look," living. vacant deputy chief position. If the fund-raising efforts for cancer the chancellory after receiving a full- To keep the soil from washing downhill on the steepest Mrs. Pehoviak makes dried arrangements of herbs and deputy chief slot is filled, it could research at the Children's Hospital in dress official military welcome and slope, from the formal garden down to the lawn, they flowers, sachets, herb pillows, scented soaps and pot­ Jeanne Pehoviak harvests wormwood in her bunch vacate another captain’s position. Boston. “We are always glad to paying a courtesy call on West Ger­ bought 30 tons of cobblestones which Mr. Pehoviak pourri. Her husband has built a dehydrator, a wooden box herb garden in Tolland, The herb will be dried, *2.49 Brooks, who joined the force in receive contributions at any time, man President \Valter Scheel at his placed by hand. There has been no erosion. with shelves of screening, heated by light bulbs. She can (CASH and CA^RY) 1964, has been a detective since 1967. but our main fund-raising campaign Lease on empty building Villa Hamnierschmidt residence then placed in muslin bags to be hung in closets FLOWBR8 $nd ARRANOeUENTS FOR EVERY OCCAEiON... Starting with the chives, Mrs. Pehoviak learned about dry herbs here in 12 to 48 hours and they will keep their He was promoted to his present posi­ starts in May and ends with the overlooking the Rhine. to keep moths away. (Herald photo by Chas­ 36 OAK ST., MANCHESTER Tel. 649.079/ or 649-1443 FREE benefit softball game in August,” he other herbs by visiting herb gardens and reading books. fresh green color. When a customer wants a growing ^^^^^PARKIN^^RANiyjAKELER^^ tion as lieutenant, administrative of­ She was fascinated by the legends and the folklore of plant, she takes a trowel to the garden and digs it. tain) ficer, in August 1976. said. these plants, grown and used for many generations, some A 1958 graduate of Manchester He and his wife, the former Donna to cost state thousands Carter and Schmidt talked to in cooking, some for fragrance and many for medicinal High School, Brooks served with the Lee Wightman and their two reporters in the chancellery lobby in front of a large painting by Ludwig purposes. Marine Corps, and was a private children, Michael and Sherri, live at By BRUNO V. RANNIELLO $129,500 per year apparently was the She began to sell herbs eight years ago and now has a detective in West Hartford before 601 Bush Hill Road.
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