WE WERE having din-' oer ai Zaberer’s in Wildwood the other night and met i^e most charming couple. Darlene and Bud MacBride from West Cape May. They are newcomers to the area and what an addition' Bud is Eastern Area Sales Manager for the 3M Company and their former lmm< was River Falls. |Wiac They are both dynamos and have started their own business here called Bud and Par’s Deliveries Par found too much time on her hands with jdat one job and since she is both a beauty and talented and trained for the ' stage she tried out for rfrid was immediately snapped up by the '76 Dinner Theatre She opens there on Oct 15 in Pajama Game just a year from the day she moved to Cape May and we. can’t wait to sec her We ll try for opening night because we’re *ure Bud will be there too and be said we could .sit togethet)| She’s a real knockout ana we re sure you’ll think so too. • * • FRIENDS of kirry K<?en who broadcasts over WWOC are delighted that h6 has just been elected national secretary of the Na-
tional Broadcasters Association: NEIGHBOR Andrew Woolery became 75 on Sept 14th but because his children and grandchildren .couldn’t be with him<he put off the celebration until the weekend. On Saturday Debbie and Ted-.’Woolery from Aston, Pa., Joan and Dave Paulson from Berwyn, .Nancy and Tom Scheidly of Newark, Del., and kids arrived. Drew (who doesn’t look over 60) i& an ardent fisherman and the present was a painting of a huge fish (about 4 by 6 feet long) with pasted on silvej; quarters to resemble fish scales The ultimate destination of th£ quarters was for Casinoland, natch, but it was too handsome to dismantle immediately and left hanging on the kitchen wall. The following Tuesday night a violent wind storm hit and the sleeping Woolerys were wakened by the sound of a shattered window. They jumped up to find out which one, dashed through the house to find the damage and found instead an unexpected jackpot. They were up to their insteps in quarters. Ted Woolery’s idea, of the fish gave them
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- two surprises. The second less happy than the first. • • • ■ SCINTILLATING Viki Wear (Mrs. Harry) of 370 95th St. was the announced guest of honor at the S.H. Chamber of Commerce dinner meeting at Hahn’s on Sept. 20th Called to the podium by Councilman Jack Fitzpatrick, Viki was told she was being honored by the Chamber for her tireless efforts on behalf of the Borough over a period df years. She wSTS' ^presented with a pewter plate commemorative of the occasion and Stone Harbor. She has worked on the Coronation of Little Miss Stone Harbor for at least 14 years and been chairwoman for the past four. She has also been cochairwoman of the Civic Club’s Annual Art Show with Marie (Mrs. Jim) Wood. An innate artist she makes glowing posters announcing upcoming events for every cause arid presents each new member
of the Women’Leivic Club with a -name plate done in impressive caligraphy highlighted in gold leaf. During winter she is a pro fessional interior decorator working out of New York, Denyer and other exciting places. She and her hus-J band live in Stamford, Conn, and in summer'she lights up our lives by exuding charm and becoming totally committed to her every endeavor. TICKET FOR the Stone Harbor Lions’ Club car raftle Benefit for the Helen L. Diller’s Vacation Home for the Blind will be limited to •200 so get yours now for the prestigious and excitement-filled evening on Sqm Oct. 10th, 6:30 p.m. at the ’76 House Dinner Theatre on Rte. 9 in Swainton. Prices are $175 per couple, tax free and wait ’til you hear what you get for .your money. Open bar, delicious dinner and dancing to excellent music. Now for' the shocker!
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Your ticket also includes chances, from among only 200 ticket holders for: Grand Prize, a 1983 Lynx car valued at $8000 ; 2nd prize a World Wide Travel Certificate for any place you choose to go worth $2,600 (all trips are fqr, 2 people); a 1-week Caribbean Cruise, $2000; a week’s vacation LIFT Jamaica, $750; 5-day ' Bahamas vaction, $525; three theatre weekends in the Big Apple worth $250 each; CaS'ino Show weekend in Atantic City, $250; and a 19” G.E. Color Television worth $500. Bill# Diller is chairing the event and Bill Dougherty will be emcee. You need not be present to win but you’d be missing an awful lot of fun and thrills. Tickets are available at Stone Harbor Pharmacy, Rock ’n Chair Restaurant, Bill Diller’s Avalon office or any member of the S.H. Lion's. • • • WE L<5VE IT when the island becomes truly our own again and we have the marvelous September weather to enjoy. There’s only one sad note — saying good-bye to merchants who have? become our friends during the summer season. We have dreaded seeing Bud’s Market slowly dwindling stock and know he is about to close for the winter. Last week , however, we found a nifty replacement that’s near as. We stopped in at Jack Brady’s Hoagie Dock & Deli for one of his old fashioned Breyer Ice Cream milk shakes and discovered he plans to be open year around. This was like finding ap oil well in our back yard. His place at 6740 Ocean Drive stocks all the necessities we are constantly running out of at the last minute like bread, butter, Spanish onions, canned delicacies as well as the practival stuff and a full line of pet foods and cigarettes. Best of all, when you’re sick of your own cooking you can run down and treat the family to his Humongous (his name for them) 20” hoagies. If you’re an old-timer in these parts you’ll remember Jack. For years in the '50s he was a
lifeguard in Avalon, Captain of the Corps in '53, then later he worked at Shelter Haven and Fred’s. It was fun running into him again and gaStronomically he made us feel much better about the approaching winter. Incidentally, he’s applied for a permit from the EPA to operate a turtle hatchery at the bay end of his property. HARRY BECKMANN. 165 102nd St. suffers from very realistic bad dreams. So realistic in fact that one night he lifted his sleeping wife in his arms rushing for the stairs sayirtg “Don't worry I’ll save you, the house is on fire." She managed to wake him before he could get her out of the house. They both went back to bed shaken but unharmed. About 5 months ago they weren’t so fortunate. This time a gang of brutes were chasing Harry in his dream and he was running for his life when he slipped on a rug hitting his 7th vertebra on a radiator as he fell. He instantly lost the ability to move. His wife called the S.H. Rescue Squad and they arrived immediately and took him to Burdette Hospital. Harry is unstinting in his praise of their • skill and kindness. He still remembers- the reassurance of Josie Rich (she and her husband Bob own the Sea Gull Shop). That same night Burdette doctors felt Harry should be transferred to Atlantic Medical Center and Bob Rich and Steve Petosa were along on that trip. Harry says he wishes he could remember all the people who helped him that night but he was naturally not thinkfng too clearly. He spent many, many weeks in a Stryker Frame and he says only the flood of getwell cards kept him from going honkers. From Atlantic City he was transferred to the Betty Bacharach Rehabilitation Center in Pomona. He is finally home and still undergoing physical therapy at CMCM. He deserves lots of credit for courage but says all credit goes to those who helped him.
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It was a pretty good Saturday for Cape May County’s high school foot,ball teams as three scored victories in season openers. Only Wildwood suffered a loss and that was in a tough game. Lower Cape May Regional, sparked by runn-. ing back David Craig, defeated Pleasantville, 15-6. Craig, who rushed for over 100 yards and is seeking to become the school’s first 2,000 yard career rusher, scored first on a three yard run. After the Capers picked up two more points on a- safety, Eddie Shretta caught a 10 yard TD_pass from Bob Chadwick to ice the game. The only Pleasantville score was set up by a 65 yard run by Sam Perry on a pass interception. The Greyhounds’ Gene Still scored from the one yard line. Ocean City, defending champions of the CapeAtlantic Team, defeated Bridgeton, 21-0. David Miller returned a punt 62 yards for a touchdown and passed for another. Mr. Do Everything also picked off two passes at the safety spot. Mark Luisi also scored for the Red Raiders
on a seven yard run. Tied at 8-8 at the half, Wildwood fell to St. Joseph of Hammonton, 26-16. The Warriors knotted the game with 21 seconds left in the first half on the Roland Turner’s one yard toucHdown run. But in the second half St. Joseph's John Brady scored on a 45 yard pass from quarterback Pat Lancetla and Charles Sacco scored twice on runs of two and 46 yards. Middle Township joined the victory group with a 20-0 victory over Buena. For details, please turn to today’s sports pages. Repaving On ELWOOD — Workmen have begun operations aimed at repaving 20 continuous lane miles of th6 roadway of the Atlantic City Expressway, which should be completed within two months at a cost over $2 million. The current resurfacing project covers the roadway eastbound from the Expressway intersection with the Garden State Parkway to Atlantic City; westbound repaving extends from Atlantic City to milepost 13 of the Expressway.

