1f>
A UNIQUE CONCEPT IN HAIR CARE. ALL NATURAL ANION PRODUCTS
AMY 4S THE AREA S ONLY CERTIFIED TECHNICIAN REPRESENTING ANION LABS
MOISTURIZERS & CONDITIONERS ARE OBSOLETE!! NOW YOUR HAIR CAN BE BLEACHED It COLORED WITHOUT PEROXIDE AND IN HALF THE USUAL TIME. BABY FINE HAIR CAN BE PERMANENTLY THICKENED PREEXISTING PERMS CAN BE FROSTED OR BLEACHED WITH LITTLE OR NO CURL RELAXATION
MAKE AN APPOINTMENT TODAY!! 884-4815
AMY’S LA CASA BELLA 522 Shurx> k e Rood. Cop© May. N J , (Vi mle south ot C M C. Airpoft)
Mrs. Donald G. Turner of Stone Harbor will be welcomed into the Member# of the Society of Mayflower Descendants in the State of New Jersey at a meeting in the Plainfield Country Club Saturday. She is a descendant of Edward Doty. ••• Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Gangloff Sr. of 10th Street, Avalon, have retyrned from a two-week 'Stay in Hawaii, fhey visited their son, Richard, who has lived there for the past six years. • • • This is important if you want to know where your taxes go! At the November 8th. meeting of Stone .Harbor Borough Council, Ronald Winter oflraffs.
News Notes from-
Seven Mile Beach M’EllerTKDwJand 368-2294
Inc. of Goshen Rd„ CMCH requested that council reconsider its present method of turning recyclables over to MUA. In 1982 the borough received $256.24 for 360.4 tons of materials. Winter said it should have been much more. By selling these same recyclables to any private company they should have made upwards of $7000 more! Taxpayers, this could represent a^dilly of savings in the way ybur tax dollars
m
Pre-Thanksgiving SALE! -jSSSSSSS-
20% OFF
Entire StocR of
' A,0 ° ShS? •" Turtleneck 5 PaJ jeans • SSW
De nim Jeans
man —
TanY ItemsReduaed
m ^%o/ ✓■vri
AS
much
AS
iny Items Reduce 40% OFF
Mo ” - f^edseesm
oho i° _ 7 for**-**
'shetlandSweate^-
pametto Dress Pants^ s1 | &C ° r °f w Skirls In Wool Plaid Skirls w «20
^hooiotJ.- ^ STARTS TODAY... ENDS SUNDAY!
FASHION BOO
Use your Fashion Bug/ Charming Shoppes' Charge Carp. VISA or MasterCard
465-2763
DENNISVILLE ROAD JAMESWAY PLAZA CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE. N.J.
HOURS — Mon.-Sat. 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Sun. 11:30 A.M. to 4:30 P.M.
are spent. We would hope you all will insist that your councilmen rethink this issue without delay. At the suggestion of Carey Boss, president of S.H. Seniors we have asked four trainees or recruits at the U.S. Coast Guard Training Center at Cape May to join us for Thanksgiving dinner. Last year the Cape May County Chapter of the American Red Cross found upwards of 206 hosts for personnel at the center in their “Operation Fireside” for the Thanksgiving and Christmas Holidays. It’s really the essence of the spirit of the season and could spark your family’s day as well. Call Gertrude Reiss at 465-7382 or 884-1587 for information — she’ll be more than glad to enroll you as a host. ••• Mark your calender now for the December meeting of the S.H. Garden Club Monday, Dec. 12 at 10 a.m. at the Fire Hall. Titled “Make Your Own Merp' Christmas” an auction will be held for the benefit of the S.H. Fire Department. On Monday, January 9 Anne Galli will discuss “An African Experience”. ••• We were pleased to learn from a letter from Gov. Thomas H. Kean that his administration “worked hard to win more funds to clean up toxic wastes than any other state.” This is great in view of the fact that each day we read of a different location for a proposed sewage treatment plant and the eventual disposal of effluent from Cape May County communities. With the proliferation of condominiums it is a situation which must be addressed immediately unless we are to be faced with the restriction on further building which obtained in Avalon last summer. ••• Father William ghelton of St. Barnabas By the Bay Episcopal Church in the Villas has recently returned from a trip to Italy which he took with 19 members and friends of his painting class. The emphasis was on painting, sculpture, and architecture, but Father Shelton is an epicure and those who traveled with him say that each restaurant they tried surpassed the one they had judged peerless the day before. He is an indefatigible man and his fellowtravelers were kept on the move constantly seeing the country, which he knows like the back of his hand. He told us their favorite sights were the Uffizi Museum in Florence, which houses the world’s finest collection of Renaissance painting as well as notable masterpieces of Flemish, Dutch, German and French antique; sculpture; and more than 100,000 drawings and prints of that era. Michelangelo's famous David, in a smaller museum devoted to his works, drew the expected gasps. They toured Pompeii, the Sistine Chapel (Page 17 Please)

