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T E
m
LEADER
/
f-
F.
Year No. 47 ttinton.
l'est l'ireinia
Thursday ,May 24, 1979
10 c00nts
HOUCHINS COOK
Postmaster Graham
Notes New Standards
"Us your small and under-
sized envelopes and cards be-
fore July 15," Postmaster Con-
rad Graham reminds Custom-
ers. That is the date when the
Postal Services new size stand-
ards become effective.
The ,Hinton postmaster said
that after July 15, envelopes and
cards measuring less than 31/z
inches high or 5 inches long will
be returned to the sender if
mailed. Postmaster Graham
said that because the envelope
and greeting card industries
have had more than three years
to prepare for the new stand-
ards, few retailers should still
be selling undersiged pieces.
The regulations also prohibit
must be at least seven- thous-
ands (.DO7) of an inch thick. An i.
official postal card, for inst-
ance, has a thickness of nine
thousandths of an inch. Under-
canareSiZed pieces and flimsy cardsbeingbecomebannedtrappedbecauSein other they i
mail, tear and jam mail proc- i ;::i:
essing machinery. ....
The standards also effect
oversized and odd- shaped pie-
ces of mail. For first- call mail
weighing one ounce or less,
there will be a surcharge of 7
cents for pieces more than 61/s
inches high or 111/2 inches long.
For more informaiton, the post-
master suggests customers
flimsy cards. In the futUre they check with the post office.
Summers Winners Area Obituaries
Commercial Contest
The Summers County Career
Center competed at Bluefield
State College on Friday, April
27 in the Thirty Sixth Annual
West Virginia State Commerc-
ial Contest. The Career Center
competed in General Business,
Typing, and Bookkeeping. .
Winners 'for the day were:
General Business, first place-
Stephanie Mathews, and fifth
place- Kathy Houchins, Typing-
fifth place Robin Persinger,
Bookkeeping- first place- Steph-
anie Mathews. Highest ranking
student for the day was Steph-
anie Mathews who was award-
ed a four-year scholarship to
Bluefield State. Kathy Houchins
is the daughter of Mrs. Phy-
llis Houchins of Pipestem; Rob-
in Persinger is the daughter of
mr. and Mrs. Garland Persin-
ger of Pence Springs, Steph-
• anie Mathews is the daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. W.P. Mathews of
Hinton.
On Saturchiy, April 28, the
Summers County Career Center
competed at the Twenty- fifth
annual State Future Business
Leaders of America Conference
at Glenville State Conference.
Miss Kristi Stokes, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Stok-
es of Bellepoint, presided over
the conference, which was att-
ended by approximately nine
hundred students and advisors.
The Career Center Chapter
won three awards- third place in
Office Procedures; Ralph Cook,
son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Cook of Buck Rt.; third place,
Chapter of the Year; Second
place, Accouting II Stephanie
Mathews, daughter of Dr. and
mrs. W.P. Mathews of Hinton.
Here is the official results of
students from Hinton IJigh
School.
Bookkeeping- Stephanie
Matbews, rankl, from Sum-
mers County Career Center
scored 230.
General Business- Stephanie
Mathews, rank 1 scored 71
points; Kathy Houchius rank 5,
scored 59 points.
Typewriting II- Robin Persin-
get, ranked 5, scored 92 points.
She tied with Toni Cook of
Woodrow Wilson High School.
Highest Ranking Students-
Stephanie Mathews rank I scor-
ed 20 points.
Summers County Career Cen-
ter rank 2 and they lost first
place by V2 point.
Planned Mobility
Council held a
Monday even-
The major item
the canvass-
the Primary
said the con-
not enough
outcome of the
would not be
Other ballots were
appeared before
Route 107
intersection of
"Preventicare" is an espec-
ially planned mobility program
of physical activity for West
Not Virginia's senior citizens. Now
in its seventh year, and co-
sponsored by the West Virginia
Department of Welfare and the
Lawrence Frankel Foundation,
there are currently more than
2,000 residents of toe state
enrolled in classes in most of the
fifty-five counties.
The Commission on Aging
and other state agencies are
currently co-operating -in an
effort to broaden the scope of
participation in accordance
with Governor Rockefeller's
mention in his state of the state
message that Preventicare be
available to all West Virginia
senior citizens.
The Preventicare Program is
--to...free of cost to -all participants;
Bridge be re- requir!ng only their physician's
Drive. Mayor
said since the
!te route, permis-
to be obtained
Virginia Depart-
Election
12 and the next
to June
with election
blessing.
The Program has attracted
nationwide attention: work-
shops and teaching Seminars
have been conducted by Found-
ation staff over the nation at
colleges, universities and state
agencies, and was the subject of
testimony at congressional
committee hearing on long term
care sponsored by Congress-
man Claude Pepper.
[inancial state: ' Currently, plans are being
of bills was drawn up for a Preventicare
meeting ad- Workshop in Princeton later
this month.
The workshop, which is tent-
atiively scheduled for May 29,
will be held at the Area 27 Office
of the West Virginia Depart-
ment of Welfare, according to
Robert M. Fanning, coordinator
of the local agency's Volunteer
Program.
Additional information relat-
ing to the workshop will be
released within the next two
weeks, said Fanning.
He added that a published
study done at West Virignia
University's Department of Re-
search and Development by
Zeller and Knight concluded,
among its findings, that the cost
effective feature of the Pro-
gram was less than $50 per year
per participant. Many express-"
ed renewed zest for living,
added vitality and an enhanced
sense of well being.
The Program, according to
research statistics, is a viable
alternative to premature instit-
utionalization, attractive beth
from fiscal and humanitarian
standpoints.
West Virignia residents
attending senior centers, meet-
ing in church groups, living in
high rise complexes or all alone
may contact for particulars,
their local Welfare Office, The
Commission on Aging or the
Lawrence Frankel Foundation
in Charleston.
BUCHANAN
Services for Mr. Robert Ohio Railway Co.
Thompson Buchannon, 78, were • Survivors include one son,
held at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Franklin James of Brooks, one
Smath- daughter, Mrs. Sally Jackson of
ers Funeral Chapel in Rainelle . Sunland, Calif., two grand child-
with the Rev. C.H. Martin off- ten and two great-grandchild-
::':;:S:YZ:I;;?:; iciating. Burial will be in the ren.
..................................................................... Wallace Memorial Cemetery at FIFE
....................................... Sam Black, Mr. Stephen Edward Fife, 40,
----.------- ...... Mr. Btichanan ded Tuesday of Bahrehin, Saudia Arabia,
.--= :i. 2 '2: .... _", morning in a Clifton Forge, Va., died Thursday morning in Paris
::::7: ::':;::_ ....... : hospital after a long illness, of an apparent heart attack.
= Born July 4, 1900, in Wise Born in Hinton on June 22,
Inllll Ilmmlmllm
Ilmmmw
MATHEWS
Pack
Guilty
A Summers County Circuit
Court jury found 'Kenneth Pack
guilty of Assault and Battery
Tuesday afternoon. Pack had
been charged with Malicious
wounding in the beating of
Jailor Ralph Johnson during a
December 31, 1977 escape from
the Summers County Jail.
David L. Ziegler was appoint-
ed Special Prosecutor in the
case which was heard before
Circuit Judge Charles Lobban
and lasted only two days.
Johnson has not returned to
work because of the extent of
injut;ies he received in the beat-
ing. The original charge of
malicious wounding carries a
sentence of two to ten years.
Maximum sentence for assault
and battery is twelve months
and a $500 fine.
INDULGENCE DECLARED
Charles II of England on
Mar. 15, 1672, issued the Dec-
laratlon of Indulgence toward
Roman Catholics and Non-
conformists.
Subscribe
County, V. hewma mm or the 1938, he was the son of the late.
late Wllliml mui Sin- Clark mad Ellen Morton
aanah Davi Buchanan. ' File.
Mr. Buansn • Hewasa membrtheFirst
railroader. Presbytm'lau Ctmr¢ of Hinton
Survivors include two sons, and a graduate of Hinton High
James of Fort Walton Beach, School and Duke University in
Fla., and Charles of Framing- North Carolina.
han, Mass.; four daughters, Survivors include his step-
Mrs. Ozella Ward of Beckley, mother, Mrs. C. E. Fife of
Laura Cunningham of Coving- Hinton; one son, Clark Edward
ton, Va., Maxine Peterson of Fife, II, and one daughter,
Davensport, Iowa, and Betty Stephanie Fife, both of New
Bragg of Meadow Bridge; 14 York City, and one brother,
grandchildren and seven great- Eugene V. Fife of San
grandchildren. Francisco, Calif.
Chevies
Services for Mrs. Vivia Mas-
0n, 33, were at 11 a.m. Damaged
Thursday in the George .W.
Scarer Chapel in Princeton with
Elder Keith Farley and the Rev.
Ralph Calfee officiating. Burial
followed in the Oakwood Park
Cemetery in Princeton.
Mrs. Mason died Tuesday
morning in a Princeton hospital
after a long illness.
Born Oct. 22, 1895, in Kegley,
she was a daughter of the late
T.J. and Josephine Hurst
Calfee.
Her first husband, Robert
Bivens, her second husband,
Sam Mason, one son, W.T.
Woody Bivens, and a brother,
Kelly Calfee preceded her in
death.
Survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. David Frances
Taylor of Charlotte, N.C., Mrs.
R.J. Gerry Flanigan of Rich
Creek, Va., and Mrs. Anna Lee
Greer of Princeton; four bro-
thers, Fred S. Calfee of Span-
ishburg, Wilford of Princeton,
T.J. of Beckley and Elmer
Calfee of Princeton; three sis-
ters, Mrs. Pearl Bailey of Col-
umbus, Ohio, Mrs. Margaret
Byrd of Ironton, Ohio, and Mrs.
Lillie Mac Schaffner of Bonita
Springs, Fla., five grandchild-
ren and eight great- grand-
children.
Pallbearers were Eddie
Ball, F.S. Ca]fee, Blake Calf-
ee, John Gobel, Larry Urqu-
herr, Leonard Comer, Haskel
Thompson and Howard Pritch-
ard.
BENNETT
Robert L. "Bob" Bennett, 108,
died Sunday morning in a Beard
hospital after a long illness.
Born in Hinton on Sept. 18, 1870,
he was a lifelong resident of the
city and a retired section fore-
man of the Chesapeake and
A 1975 Chevrolet driven by
Sidney J. Weaver of Pence
Springs received about $800
damage Monday afternoon
when Weaver collided with a
Chevrolet truck driven by
Patricia K. Walton, also of
Pence Springs.
Damage to the Walton vehicle
was estimated at $800. There
were no injuries and Weaver
was charged by Trooper B. W.
Twyman with failure to keep
right of center.
Mathews Named
'79 First Lady
Cleo P. Mathews was recog-
nized for her accomplishments
in her special field with the title
of First Lady of the Year at the
Mother-Daughter Luncheon. A
Certificate of Recognition was
presented to her at that time.
The First Lady Program is
sponsored by the local chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. It is
presented to the woman of the
community who has made out-
standing contributions in her
her respective field.
Cleo is the daughter of Mr: &
Mrs. Dennis Maroudas of Wil-
liamson. She is married to Dr.
W. P. Mathews. They have two
daughters, Stephanie, a senior
at Hinton High School, and
Sylvia, an eight grade student.
Summers County. She has serv-
ed twenty, years in the teaching
field, and was recently selected
by the teachers of the county to
serve on the newly formed
Continuing Education Commit-
tee.
As head of the business de-
partment at the Summers
County Career Center, she co-
sponsors the local chapter of the
Future Business Leaders of
America.
The Summers County Library
is another of her interests as she
participates in Friends of the
Library.
She serves as vice-president
of the Service Club, a member
of the Wednesday Club, Busi-
ness and Professional Women's
Mrs. Mathews was graduated .Club, Hinton Woman's Club,
from Williamson High School American Vocational Associa-
and the University ofCincinnatti tion, and the West Virginia
a member of Mortar Board Vocational Association.
Honorary, and Kappa Delta
Sorority.
She attends the Ascension
Episcopal Church where she is
a member of the vestry and
serves as president of their
women's organization.
Cleo has contributed a good
share of her time and energy to
furthering education in
Beta Sigma Phi feels she is
loyal, dependable, and in her
daily life demonstrates these
qualities. She devotes a tremen-
dous amount of her time to her
teaching position and demon-
Strates many of these traits
essential to any task or respon-
sibility she undertakes in the
community.
Almost In River
Rain-slick highways over the weekend led to an
unidentified motorist losing control of this Ford
Mustang near the llinton Autorama in Bellepoin
Saturday evening. The car skidded over a bauk
and narrowly missed going into the Greenbrier
River. llinton City Policemen investigated.
J
T E
m
LEADER
/
f-
F.
Year No. 47 ttinton.
l'est l'ireinia
Thursday ,May 24, 1979
10 c00nts
HOUCHINS COOK
Postmaster Graham
Notes New Standards
"Us your small and under-
sized envelopes and cards be-
fore July 15," Postmaster Con-
rad Graham reminds Custom-
ers. That is the date when the
Postal Services new size stand-
ards become effective.
The ,Hinton postmaster said
that after July 15, envelopes and
cards measuring less than 31/z
inches high or 5 inches long will
be returned to the sender if
mailed. Postmaster Graham
said that because the envelope
and greeting card industries
have had more than three years
to prepare for the new stand-
ards, few retailers should still
be selling undersiged pieces.
The regulations also prohibit
must be at least seven- thous-
ands (.DO7) of an inch thick. An i.
official postal card, for inst-
ance, has a thickness of nine
thousandths of an inch. Under-
canareSiZed pieces and flimsy cardsbeingbecomebannedtrappedbecauSein other they i
mail, tear and jam mail proc- i ;::i:
essing machinery. ....
The standards also effect
oversized and odd- shaped pie-
ces of mail. For first- call mail
weighing one ounce or less,
there will be a surcharge of 7
cents for pieces more than 61/s
inches high or 111/2 inches long.
For more informaiton, the post-
master suggests customers
flimsy cards. In the futUre they check with the post office.
Summers Winners Area Obituaries
Commercial Contest
The Summers County Career
Center competed at Bluefield
State College on Friday, April
27 in the Thirty Sixth Annual
West Virginia State Commerc-
ial Contest. The Career Center
competed in General Business,
Typing, and Bookkeeping. .
Winners 'for the day were:
General Business, first place-
Stephanie Mathews, and fifth
place- Kathy Houchins, Typing-
fifth place Robin Persinger,
Bookkeeping- first place- Steph-
anie Mathews. Highest ranking
student for the day was Steph-
anie Mathews who was award-
ed a four-year scholarship to
Bluefield State. Kathy Houchins
is the daughter of Mrs. Phy-
llis Houchins of Pipestem; Rob-
in Persinger is the daughter of
mr. and Mrs. Garland Persin-
ger of Pence Springs, Steph-
• anie Mathews is the daughter of
Dr. and Mrs. W.P. Mathews of
Hinton.
On Saturchiy, April 28, the
Summers County Career Center
competed at the Twenty- fifth
annual State Future Business
Leaders of America Conference
at Glenville State Conference.
Miss Kristi Stokes, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Stok-
es of Bellepoint, presided over
the conference, which was att-
ended by approximately nine
hundred students and advisors.
The Career Center Chapter
won three awards- third place in
Office Procedures; Ralph Cook,
son of Mr. and Mrs. George
Cook of Buck Rt.; third place,
Chapter of the Year; Second
place, Accouting II Stephanie
Mathews, daughter of Dr. and
mrs. W.P. Mathews of Hinton.
Here is the official results of
students from Hinton IJigh
School.
Bookkeeping- Stephanie
Matbews, rankl, from Sum-
mers County Career Center
scored 230.
General Business- Stephanie
Mathews, rank 1 scored 71
points; Kathy Houchius rank 5,
scored 59 points.
Typewriting II- Robin Persin-
get, ranked 5, scored 92 points.
She tied with Toni Cook of
Woodrow Wilson High School.
Highest Ranking Students-
Stephanie Mathews rank I scor-
ed 20 points.
Summers County Career Cen-
ter rank 2 and they lost first
place by V2 point.
Planned Mobility
Council held a
Monday even-
The major item
the canvass-
the Primary
said the con-
not enough
outcome of the
would not be
Other ballots were
appeared before
Route 107
intersection of
"Preventicare" is an espec-
ially planned mobility program
of physical activity for West
Not Virginia's senior citizens. Now
in its seventh year, and co-
sponsored by the West Virginia
Department of Welfare and the
Lawrence Frankel Foundation,
there are currently more than
2,000 residents of toe state
enrolled in classes in most of the
fifty-five counties.
The Commission on Aging
and other state agencies are
currently co-operating -in an
effort to broaden the scope of
participation in accordance
with Governor Rockefeller's
mention in his state of the state
message that Preventicare be
available to all West Virginia
senior citizens.
The Preventicare Program is
--to...free of cost to -all participants;
Bridge be re- requir!ng only their physician's
Drive. Mayor
said since the
!te route, permis-
to be obtained
Virginia Depart-
Election
12 and the next
to June
with election
blessing.
The Program has attracted
nationwide attention: work-
shops and teaching Seminars
have been conducted by Found-
ation staff over the nation at
colleges, universities and state
agencies, and was the subject of
testimony at congressional
committee hearing on long term
care sponsored by Congress-
man Claude Pepper.
[inancial state: ' Currently, plans are being
of bills was drawn up for a Preventicare
meeting ad- Workshop in Princeton later
this month.
The workshop, which is tent-
atiively scheduled for May 29,
will be held at the Area 27 Office
of the West Virginia Depart-
ment of Welfare, according to
Robert M. Fanning, coordinator
of the local agency's Volunteer
Program.
Additional information relat-
ing to the workshop will be
released within the next two
weeks, said Fanning.
He added that a published
study done at West Virignia
University's Department of Re-
search and Development by
Zeller and Knight concluded,
among its findings, that the cost
effective feature of the Pro-
gram was less than $50 per year
per participant. Many express-"
ed renewed zest for living,
added vitality and an enhanced
sense of well being.
The Program, according to
research statistics, is a viable
alternative to premature instit-
utionalization, attractive beth
from fiscal and humanitarian
standpoints.
West Virignia residents
attending senior centers, meet-
ing in church groups, living in
high rise complexes or all alone
may contact for particulars,
their local Welfare Office, The
Commission on Aging or the
Lawrence Frankel Foundation
in Charleston.
BUCHANAN
Services for Mr. Robert Ohio Railway Co.
Thompson Buchannon, 78, were • Survivors include one son,
held at 2 p.m. Thursday in the Franklin James of Brooks, one
Smath- daughter, Mrs. Sally Jackson of
ers Funeral Chapel in Rainelle . Sunland, Calif., two grand child-
with the Rev. C.H. Martin off- ten and two great-grandchild-
::':;:S:YZ:I;;?:; iciating. Burial will be in the ren.
..................................................................... Wallace Memorial Cemetery at FIFE
....................................... Sam Black, Mr. Stephen Edward Fife, 40,
----.------- ...... Mr. Btichanan ded Tuesday of Bahrehin, Saudia Arabia,
.--= :i. 2 '2: .... _", morning in a Clifton Forge, Va., died Thursday morning in Paris
::::7: ::':;::_ ....... : hospital after a long illness, of an apparent heart attack.
= Born July 4, 1900, in Wise Born in Hinton on June 22,
Inllll Ilmmlmllm
Ilmmmw
MATHEWS
Pack
Guilty
A Summers County Circuit
Court jury found 'Kenneth Pack
guilty of Assault and Battery
Tuesday afternoon. Pack had
been charged with Malicious
wounding in the beating of
Jailor Ralph Johnson during a
December 31, 1977 escape from
the Summers County Jail.
David L. Ziegler was appoint-
ed Special Prosecutor in the
case which was heard before
Circuit Judge Charles Lobban
and lasted only two days.
Johnson has not returned to
work because of the extent of
injut;ies he received in the beat-
ing. The original charge of
malicious wounding carries a
sentence of two to ten years.
Maximum sentence for assault
and battery is twelve months
and a $500 fine.
INDULGENCE DECLARED
Charles II of England on
Mar. 15, 1672, issued the Dec-
laratlon of Indulgence toward
Roman Catholics and Non-
conformists.
Subscribe
County, V. hewma mm or the 1938, he was the son of the late.
late Wllliml mui Sin- Clark mad Ellen Morton
aanah Davi Buchanan. ' File.
Mr. Buansn • Hewasa membrtheFirst
railroader. Presbytm'lau Ctmr¢ of Hinton
Survivors include two sons, and a graduate of Hinton High
James of Fort Walton Beach, School and Duke University in
Fla., and Charles of Framing- North Carolina.
han, Mass.; four daughters, Survivors include his step-
Mrs. Ozella Ward of Beckley, mother, Mrs. C. E. Fife of
Laura Cunningham of Coving- Hinton; one son, Clark Edward
ton, Va., Maxine Peterson of Fife, II, and one daughter,
Davensport, Iowa, and Betty Stephanie Fife, both of New
Bragg of Meadow Bridge; 14 York City, and one brother,
grandchildren and seven great- Eugene V. Fife of San
grandchildren. Francisco, Calif.
Chevies
Services for Mrs. Vivia Mas-
0n, 33, were at 11 a.m. Damaged
Thursday in the George .W.
Scarer Chapel in Princeton with
Elder Keith Farley and the Rev.
Ralph Calfee officiating. Burial
followed in the Oakwood Park
Cemetery in Princeton.
Mrs. Mason died Tuesday
morning in a Princeton hospital
after a long illness.
Born Oct. 22, 1895, in Kegley,
she was a daughter of the late
T.J. and Josephine Hurst
Calfee.
Her first husband, Robert
Bivens, her second husband,
Sam Mason, one son, W.T.
Woody Bivens, and a brother,
Kelly Calfee preceded her in
death.
Survivors include three
daughters, Mrs. David Frances
Taylor of Charlotte, N.C., Mrs.
R.J. Gerry Flanigan of Rich
Creek, Va., and Mrs. Anna Lee
Greer of Princeton; four bro-
thers, Fred S. Calfee of Span-
ishburg, Wilford of Princeton,
T.J. of Beckley and Elmer
Calfee of Princeton; three sis-
ters, Mrs. Pearl Bailey of Col-
umbus, Ohio, Mrs. Margaret
Byrd of Ironton, Ohio, and Mrs.
Lillie Mac Schaffner of Bonita
Springs, Fla., five grandchild-
ren and eight great- grand-
children.
Pallbearers were Eddie
Ball, F.S. Ca]fee, Blake Calf-
ee, John Gobel, Larry Urqu-
herr, Leonard Comer, Haskel
Thompson and Howard Pritch-
ard.
BENNETT
Robert L. "Bob" Bennett, 108,
died Sunday morning in a Beard
hospital after a long illness.
Born in Hinton on Sept. 18, 1870,
he was a lifelong resident of the
city and a retired section fore-
man of the Chesapeake and
A 1975 Chevrolet driven by
Sidney J. Weaver of Pence
Springs received about $800
damage Monday afternoon
when Weaver collided with a
Chevrolet truck driven by
Patricia K. Walton, also of
Pence Springs.
Damage to the Walton vehicle
was estimated at $800. There
were no injuries and Weaver
was charged by Trooper B. W.
Twyman with failure to keep
right of center.
Mathews Named
'79 First Lady
Cleo P. Mathews was recog-
nized for her accomplishments
in her special field with the title
of First Lady of the Year at the
Mother-Daughter Luncheon. A
Certificate of Recognition was
presented to her at that time.
The First Lady Program is
sponsored by the local chapter
of Beta Sigma Phi Sorority. It is
presented to the woman of the
community who has made out-
standing contributions in her
her respective field.
Cleo is the daughter of Mr: &
Mrs. Dennis Maroudas of Wil-
liamson. She is married to Dr.
W. P. Mathews. They have two
daughters, Stephanie, a senior
at Hinton High School, and
Sylvia, an eight grade student.
Summers County. She has serv-
ed twenty, years in the teaching
field, and was recently selected
by the teachers of the county to
serve on the newly formed
Continuing Education Commit-
tee.
As head of the business de-
partment at the Summers
County Career Center, she co-
sponsors the local chapter of the
Future Business Leaders of
America.
The Summers County Library
is another of her interests as she
participates in Friends of the
Library.
She serves as vice-president
of the Service Club, a member
of the Wednesday Club, Busi-
ness and Professional Women's
Mrs. Mathews was graduated .Club, Hinton Woman's Club,
from Williamson High School American Vocational Associa-
and the University ofCincinnatti tion, and the West Virginia
a member of Mortar Board Vocational Association.
Honorary, and Kappa Delta
Sorority.
She attends the Ascension
Episcopal Church where she is
a member of the vestry and
serves as president of their
women's organization.
Cleo has contributed a good
share of her time and energy to
furthering education in
Beta Sigma Phi feels she is
loyal, dependable, and in her
daily life demonstrates these
qualities. She devotes a tremen-
dous amount of her time to her
teaching position and demon-
Strates many of these traits
essential to any task or respon-
sibility she undertakes in the
community.
Almost In River
Rain-slick highways over the weekend led to an
unidentified motorist losing control of this Ford
Mustang near the llinton Autorama in Bellepoin
Saturday evening. The car skidded over a bauk
and narrowly missed going into the Greenbrier
River. llinton City Policemen investigated.
J
THE
LEADER
Year No, 47 llinton, ffest I'irginia Thursday May 24, 1979 10 cnts
COOK
om oeed: Igh Ck,
son or tar. and M CJeorge
Ck of Bk Rt 4 third pla,
Cer of the Y; cond
place, AuUng U Steame
Mathews. ,ght of Dr. and
mrs WP me of Hi•ton.
H is me ame+al ,Its
smdIs tm Himo, I gh
Bkplng. Stephlme
Method, ra,kl, tram Sum-
me County Ca Cr
ored .
Genel Btn spame
Mathews, rank I scored 71
m; thy Ho,em r,nk S,
seared polam
Typtmg U- aobin Pen-
get, ranked S, o pomp.
She ttea with ron Ck at
WOodr WJlBon mgh School.
mght nng Students-
Stephanle mamews rank I sr+
d- o[ Amen Co•tepee ed 0 poi,ts.
at lenvme sate Cntence. Summem Cty Car Cen-
trals Krtm sto. ,ghter of r rank 2 ,rid they lt tst
mr. ann m CarZ W. S- phc by ' ot
Planned Mobility
Postmaster Graham
Notes New Standards
"v. y area, .nd de mum b at Ist ven- mo.
ed velop and r as(.7otaNi.eh m,c
fo july 15." Postmaster Con. official postal card, for tat-
red Oraham amiNeS cto- anne, Im. thlckn a nt
. That IS the date wh the thoundths or an inch Under.
Po+talServtwze stand, sized p and my eors
ard become effective are being banned beca they
e tic.ton postmast ta can become trapped in oth,
thatflJylS,enveIopand mall, tr an lam mall p
card msuang I man [ng maehtry,
nh high or I.ebes long It
be tned to me sender The stnr ao eft
mailed. Ptmaster Gbam over,zeal and odd shaped pl
s.m mat a the velope e o tl. nor not- all m.,
and gting card t.dtrl weigh• o ce or [
havehedmothanthry thewi H asergeof7
to prepa for the new stand, centforpi morethan6%
at&. few reall ShoLd still mcn mg or lit, mch ong
be Ui.g deiged pi F more mfaiton the pst
e maattom o prom masl +ugmm e,emm
fdmay rd In the fut they chk Wlth the pct offi
spore by t Wt wra
oep*rtment ot welte d the
tawreee Franhel FSatien,
ther eurntly more man
held a 2,Ce0 im of the state
enll t eZ=s in mt el the
finy-five coti
e Commiion on Agt.g
and other state ag .
erently +peraing t. an
etfort to baen the ope el
the participation n ar,n
wth Governor ='kefener's
menttm in hls stat of the state
meage ttmt erewUc.re be
avalahle to all Wt Virginia
enior ctzcns.
The pveaUrc pg,'am is
to f of et to U paricims,
t Bridge be requl.gmlytheirphyieia.'s
' lrive. Mayar bLsing
m said amce the e pgram Is attraemd
nationwide altenti: *orE-
shop and teachin mina
ha+e tee. cond.eted by Fne.
ation staff over me natt at
mlccton college, veiti and stae
agci, and was me subject or
ttimy al ngiol
eomltlee hring oo Io.g tm
care sred by Congr-
Cut.nay, ph.s a ing
drawn up for a pve.t
Whop . p,neeon later
Summers Winners Area Obituaries
Commercial Contest .........
Servc for Mr Robert Ohio ilwayC(
'thompson Buchanan, 7a, we Suivo mclude one sot
held at pm La in the Franklin Jam er k. o,,
South. daghler, Mrs Sally dacn of
J :Let a ?a 'CeAr nt !Vrdih+ samWallacelClatingMr,Bhck.,$j+l.n, nMem°rlaIBuria. WdldredCemeterybe++dayln theat ofrenMr Bahrehin .Stephen'lFE+dwardSa udla FifeArabla40
competedlnaenerelnmtness, : morntngtnatfftonFnrge, Va., dtedThurSdaymornmgmPar m
Typing, and Boakk+ping. -+ h¢ital am a long illn+, of an apparmt hart attack
Winnem tor the day were: Bern July 4, its0, kn WIM corn m Inton m J m
Gmerai Brain+s+ first plum. Gunly, Vl+ mldt I hewattSONOtthelate
Stephame re.the*+, +d ruth ImWMm=tmtm- matm,mm+
p]a. Kathy rlouchtm, pmg- v n ,
fifth place Robin Peking.+ Mr. Bn wm • HewasamtlmFirm
Bkkping- ft pta- Steph- rli). Prb/etel £4 Nnton
anie Mathe. Hight ranking m Survtv lude t s, and • M of HInt Bigh
studt [or the day was Neph- Jam of Fort W Beach, De Unlvmlty in
anie Mothews who w,s .wd Fta, and l of Framing- North Calina
ed a to-yr selwlanmip to mime ban, Mass ; fn daughters, Suivs +ncludc his slep.
mmm m O=e.a Ward of Bkley, mother, M c N Fife of
BluPfield State, KaLhy Hohins
is the daught of Mrs. Phy- l lIEl Laura Oannlngh of Coving- tfinton: nneson, Clark Ow.rd
lilsHouchtnsofptpestem ; Rob- Imll ton, Va, Maxine Petern of Fife, II, and one daughter,
in Pe=ngar Is the daughter of mmll Day.sport, Iowa, and Betty Stephame Fife, Lth of New
mr. and Par.. Garland Pemn- gg of adaw Bridge; l+ York city, and one brother,
grandchildren and seven grit- Zugene V Fife of San
get of pen Sprlng, SLeph- ml+.l l+14qlli++ grandchildren Pranols. Calif•
anie Mathews i$ the daught of
.intoo ..................... ? ..... r,.Chevies_,1
on s.t+day, Apm m, the se+Icm or Mm Viva mas-
on. m. wem at n a.m.
g .... County+r'Centec amameu
cpeted at the Twenty+ flRb MATHEW8 Thsdy in the George W
annul state Fut Busins SeavChapetlnPrincetonwith A 975 (nevrool driven by
• lderKm£hFarleyandtheRv Sidney d Wver of Pn
RalphCalfofficiating. Bia[ Springs eived about $8
followed in the Oakwood Park damage Monday arleen
Cemetery in Princeton, when wv collided wilh a
M Mon died Tudmy Chevrolet trek driven by
morningmaPmehospRal Palrieia K. Walton, aim of
p 1 after a Iong illn. Pete Springs
aCK Born oct 22, t895, tn Kegley, Damage to the Walton vehicle
she was • daughter of the late was timated at $66O There
., ....... .,, ..... . ......... _ G ilty ......................... j ....... , ....
Jelly planned mobility program The workshop, which is tent U Calfm. was charged by Tr roper [l W
Her aft hmband, Rol:t Twyman with fadure to keep
'T of physimI aetivRy for Wmt atilvely ehedaled f+ May m, A
ot V+rgtnta'a ardor ¢itm. Now witltdattheArm Orfi Coot jury farad Kcmneth PaekSummem County ctrcml Samtivens'MamN, bet mmdme +,h"sd'WT right of nter
m +is seventh year, and c+ of me wmt Vtrgin+a Depart.
meaL of Welfare, ardmg to guilty of Assault and Battery WOOdy revere, and a broth+,
Robert M.Fanning, rdlnator Tday aRem, Pack had fly Cal/m pred h+ in
of the lt ,gmcy's Vnlunt ben chare ruth Mellelnm death
pr+ won m the tJemmg et surv+vom +nel. tame
Addltlmal informaUon flat- Jailor Ralph dcn dunng a daughtem, mm David Francm
iNg to the +kshop will be Iamber3t, tn ape from TayLor of Char+lie, N.C, +s
+tea thn the mxt two the Sers Comfy Jail. R J Gary Flanighn of Rich
Dav,d L Z+e#+ wm appoint. Creek, Va.. and M, Anna Lee
wmks, mid Faming
He added mat a pubLIsh+ ed Special pm+r In [ Grr o[ ince[on; [o+ +m.
study done at w+t Vtdta case wch was heard to mers, Fred S+ Calt or Span-
Univem+ty's Department of R C'¢uit JUdge Charlm Lobban +shburg, w+I/ord of princeton,
• arch and Development by an lasted only two days TJ of Beckley and Fm+
miler and Knight +luded. Johnson has not retmed to Calf ot Prmoetm; thrm sis
ong its fading•, that the t rk beea of the +trot of tern, Mrs. Pearl Bailey nt COl.
effmtive fmtm of the p+ injurimhemeivediN thebeat. +b, Oh+o, Mrs. Margaret
gamwaslmsthan$50poryear Lag. +l#'l chge of Byrdoflnton, Ohio, mMrs.
pe r part c pa n Many +- mallet wodng mmm a LlUe Mac Se,atIner of ontta
ed renewed mt for living, sentmee of two In tm yearn Sprit, a., five andchm d
added vitally and aN mhan maxhlt mntence for autt rm and eight [rat grand-
raN+ of well ruing and battery m +mire month* children.
"I've Program, according to and a 0 fine. pallbearem m Eddie
ramh statistim, Is a viable Ball. FS Calfm, Blake Calf-
alterUve to pmmatm imttt- . John Gobel+ Lm'ry Urqu-
H•skel
utionalttioa, attraeli both
fm tmJ and hdaran
standpoints, is*ui,otNct: OECS]Up a
wt Virlgnia ridents char] lI of E41gland
attending nior nt, meet+ M, 1, 1672, issued the D
uNtx'r
mg a eh gup, I.ng in laraUoncInaulgemwara aoberh "eob+'eentt, 10e,
highelaeamptex=orattalone Roman atholIes and N- diedSdaymnm*nginaIard
may contact [or parliculars, ectlflt hpital aft a Ig illn
their Ial Welfare offi, The B in Hint on on Sept. IS, I'/,
Commieion Aging the he wasa llfelgIdenl of the
Lawn Frankel Foundation city and a ttired tion fo
m char==m Subscribe n of me c.,ak+ and
Mathews Named
'79 First Lady
ClP Mathewasng- $msCounty Shehas+
Nid for her aeeFhshmmlts twty yn tn the teittag
m her special tl,a wah the UUe tiad,d w.s Uy ted
of Fire Ldy ef th Yr at the by the tue ol me ty to
Mother.r)au.@ter t.heon A sere the newly toed
Ctmte of R,ogmUon waa ctinng red.anon Comm.
pnted to her at that It. t
e Ft Lady program is AS head et the b d
open.red hy me lal chapter pertinent at me Smers
er tt. stoma phl Sorty. It L Catty Ca Cam, she C
ponted to the woman al the aon thel•l ehap at the
commtywohasmadeout- Vute Bmln Le.de ot
amndmg conmt,ons , h ,tmerlaa
her Ikva iem. The Summe Catty t.lbr
ClsthedaUterofrar isaaothaberinttsshe
i. Dem,a Mamuda of Wt participat in Fnas af me
flamen, se i med to Vr Library
W. P Mamewa. They have two
daughters, Stepharae, • m She •s viprIdzat
at mnt nig Seht, and al tt.e Service Clu, • mtx'r
of the wea.esar ctuh, el-
Solo,•, n eight grade atudent, n ad Ptlanal Wom'
r.ls, mathewsaagradted Club, llmton Woman'a Club,
rm Witllam l.gh Schl Aeriaa. Vatonal -
arthaUniwaitynCinealtl t,, and the West Vlr#ma
a member of Mortar P.o.rd Vate,.sl ASaUo..
Honorary. a.d Kappa Della Beta Sgm• Pal tIs e Is
Sorority loyal, dependable, and . er
She attas the Ascension daily lfo eemtrat tt,es
Epispal Chh whe she qliti She devet a trmen+
a mmher ot the try and dnamotofhtimeloh
se as pdant of the,r leadang 0ositnn and derek-
+om's orga.izaton, strafes many of m traits
CI haa eontribut a gced tiallna.ytaskor pon-
shareothertlmea.denergyto a0allty abe UNdert.k In *he
tther+ng edue.tion n mmty.
...... :: ;:+: .+ Ate-" (" '
Almost In River
al.llk highways o+=r the wkn Led a. Saturday ++e.l. +r, r kmdt or a Im.k
unidentifi marxist Iing control al this Ford and nnrrowly mlssed golng Inlo lhe Gnbrl