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The Herald and Hie Lantern
Wednesday, January 16,1980
KREME HONEY
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DIPPED OLD FASHIONED PIA/^
•tSS" It’s worth the trip. MUTES • I 47, RIC RRIIIE Ill-Nil Open 24 Hours, 7 Days
SPECIAL Jan. 16-22 Only - No Coupon Noodod
BUY A CUP OF
COFFEE
Ml TOU’LL SET I
FREE DONUT (Good only «t Rio Grands • Good only at Countor)
WITH THIS COUPON ^ II Till JIIIIRT 22 IHLT ^ 10 0FF %SSSSs.!
I Umlt -1 Di. Par Customar-Ono Coupon Par Cu.lomor . _ (Good Only At Rio Grands) | \ ^ jjonkin; donuts^ ^ j
WEEKDAY SPECIALS
MONDAY: Box of 46 MUNCNKINS 00
TUESDAY: 3 Froo Donuts WHIN YOU RUT A DOZIN 15?12
Venison Dinner Feb. 16
TUCKAHOE - The Cape May County Board of Agriculture’i annual venison dinner will be Saturday, February 16, at the Tuckahoe American Legion Home on Route SO, and senior county agent, John MacLeod expects a turnout of some 250 fprm and rural people. George Betts of, Petersburg, president of the county Board of Agriculture, will serve as toastmaster. He is also chairman of the venison dinner committee, which also include. Harold Shaw of Marmora, Louis DiLuzio of Tuckahoe, Bernard Germanio of Belleplain and Vo-Tech
Leslie C. Rea of West Cape May. Betts noted in 2 news release that the venison dinner has been an annual attraction for over 26 consecutive years and has become a “real tradition” in Cape May County. Main purpose of the dinner is to honor a county farmer for his outstanding contribution to agriculture and rural life. The name of the award winner remains a secret until the night of the dinner. This year's program will also feature awards to two outstanding county 4-H members for thetr achievements in the 4-H youth program. County and state legislators are ex-
pected to attend along with representations from the New Jersey Department of Agriculture, the New Jersey Farm Bureau and Cook College, Rutgers University. Tickets for the dinner, which will be served family style, may be obtained from any member of the executive committee of the Cape May County Board of Agriculture or from the Cape May County Extension Service Educational Center prior to February 6. Door prizes will be donated by various South Jersey agribusiness farmers. The dinner starts at 6:30 p m., entrees include beef as well as venison.
Fulginiti Completes
Gvil Defense Course
Honors Graduates COURT HOUSE - The “Graduate of the Week" at the Cape May County VoTech Center program serves a dual purpose for current Vo-Tech students. It presents a valuable role model in the vocational trades offered at the Cape May County Vo-Tech and at the same time it recognizes outstanding alumni who are excelling in their chosen vocation, school sources said. The graduates selected are nominated by members of the Cape ' May County Vo-Tech instructional staff. The following have been designated "Graduate of 1 the Week" for the month of January, 1960: Jan 7, i960 - James A. Path graduated in 1977 from Drafting Technology. He is currently employed^ as a Chief Draftsperson for Donald C. Zacker, Architect. Jan. 14, I960 - Steve Rondeau graduated in 1979 and is currently employed as a Pressman at the Duplicating Center in Marmora. Jan. 21, i960 - Eva V. Kane graudated in 1979 from the Dental Assistant program and is currently a receptionist in the office of Irving N. Maslow, D.D.S. in Wildwood. Jan. 28. 1960 - Lillian Smith graduated from the LPN program in 1979 and is currently employed at Burdette Tomlin Memorial Hospital as a Graduate Practical Nurse. Sci-Fi & Comedy Film Offerings At Co. Library COURT HOUSE - A 1926 sci-fi classic and a 1936 comedy-to-remember are the offerings this week and next at the County Library. Film showings are every Friday night at 7:30, throughout the winter. All are free. Call 466-7837 about individual showings. Janaary 18 — Fritz Lang’s Metropolis uses extraordinary sets and designs to depict a mechanized Utopia plagued by a struggle between capital and labor; Jaaaary 25 - William Powell and Carole Lombard star in My Man Godfrey, the story of a zany millionnaire family which invites a tramp to become their butler only to discover he is richer than they are.
Captain Vincent L. Fulginiti, of Wildwood, completed a Civil DefenseDisaster Control Basic Seminar in December at Doolan's Inn, in Spring Lake Heights. The two-day event, designed to upgrade CD DC professional stature, was conducted by Joseph C. Piotroski, Executive Assistant, Emergency Management Section, Sate Police. Instructors were Vincent Stemhagen, Principal Auditor; Patrick Sharpe, Chief of Federal Aid: Consultant Bruce E.
Ohlendorf of Rutgers; Trenton CD-DC Director Melvin Ruhl, and Lieutenant Colonel James SU11, USAF Reserves Subjects covered during the seminar included the following: Duties of the CD-DC Director, Nuclear Civil Protection. Radiological Defense, Federal Funding, and Local Emergency Plans. "The benefits of this training can only aid CDDC, Fulginitti said. "We now also have a better picture of local emergencies."
WINTER SALE Boy and Girl Scout Headquarters. fJfftohrNL INFANTS TO TECNS^ 9:30.5 DAILY AVI. m*m FRIDAY 7-9 WILDWOOD V CLOSED SUN. ■22-4221 H
VALENTINE'S W DAY
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FOR FAMILY. FRIENDS ft
BAYSBORE VARIETY OPEN ^TO 9 DAILY WOODLAND 6 BAYSHORE ROAD, VILLAS

