Cape May County Herald, 20 June 1984 IIIF issue link — Page 26

m 26 Herald & Lantern 20 June '84

ore Sa/a</ . <5e 21st & Dune Drive, Avalon, N.J. «*/• Cool off with a CRISP SALAD f Large Selection of Fresh Vegetables Home-Style Soups m\- Sandwiches & Desserts / M All you can eat *2.99 Qi. Single Serving *1.69 $ ^ JAKE, RALPH, AND THE GANG, A? 1 THE UGLY MUG, CAPE MAY, ' WANT TO THANK THE FIRE I MARSHALL, ALL THE FIREMEN, POLICEMEN, AND ALL WHO HELPED US DURING OUR FIRE ON JUNE 1ST. A SPECIAL THANKS TO ALL THE MERCHANTS FOR THEIR ASSISTANCE. \- Fine Dining and Dancing Featuring in June — Surf or Turf Specials Full 5-Course Combination Seafood or Full Cut Prime Rib Dinner Includes: CIJwA Chowder. House Salad, Appetizer, 3 Fresh Vegetables, Dessert, Beverage, Relish Tray, Homemade Rolls . Just $13.95 Served Nightly Except Saturday Doug Williams For Your Dancing & Dining Pleasure Reservations Accepted (609) 884-343 1 Located in the 1 Inn on the Beach — For All Seasons Hetyven Ocean and Decatur on Reach Drive Historic Cape May. N J. ' " Y

Victorian Fair Set Saturday

CAPE MAY - The city will celebrate its traditional Victorian Fair 10 a.m. 4 p.m Saturday. ( rain date June 24 > on the grounds of the Emlen Physick Estate. 1048 Washington St. It is sponsored by the Mid-Atlantic Center for the Arts (MAC), and admission is free for both children and adults. Among the fair's attractions will be: food booths.

selling everything from hot dogs to funnel cakes, freshsqueezed lemonade, and Southern fried chicken; a free children's theater production of "Androcles and the Lion", presented on MAC's outdoor stage by the Jersey Cape Performing Arts Guild; dozens of booths selling collectibles and handicraft items of all descriptions A 50/50 raffle, with hourly callings throughout the

day; Victorian children's games, including a dunking booth, bean-bag tosses, and hoop rollings; a grand sale of thousands of books ( both new and old ) and 19th Century prints; and a clown selling balloons, as well as a clown make-up booth for children. There is free parking on the grounds behind the Physick Estate.

. Wetlands Speaker Spotlights Indians

STONE HARBOR - The challenging seaich to reveal life mysteries of early American indians wTio lived and roamed along the Atlantic coast hundreds of years age will presented by the ^i'etlands Institute and Museum this month. "Coastal Indians" will be the topic of archeologist Dick Regensburg. who will show slides '«nd bring some Artifacts for the audience handle at 8: 15 pm Saturday in the Marshview Lecture Hall at the institute.

Regensburg, a native of New Jersey, fives in Oceanview and, ps archeological consultant, is working on some sites in Bergen County. He has worked as assistant to the state areheologists in North Carolina and Delaware. He is also excavating at Tuckerton, where it is believed that a 1715 farm house served as Count Pulaski's temporary headquarters during the American Revolution. | SUBMERGED or buried . oyster and clam shells j have neutralized the | ground along the bay and seashore to help preserve • bones and other objects • Hhat would normally •disintegrate. Says Regensburg. "Mother ^Nature's preservation •methods make coastal ar- .; cheology an exciting hunt " p His most important find gjwas at a Marlton site near ••'•Cherry* Hill, where he . discovered exotic stone tools in an ancient ft* cemetery of 39 graves. The JjSavich Farm discovery / Iwas confirmed as the \ • pearliest major burial I / ground in the Middle AtlanP tic states, dating to 2,000 Sfi B.(J. The farm is now on the '^National Register of ^ i Historic Sites, but is is not : open to the public. jjj REGENSBERG says his (father's knowledge of South Jersey Indian burial grounds started him on an i; early hobby of collecting .surface arrowheads and j artifacts. He later joined l the Boy Scouts Order of the Arrow, and then went

from hobby to full-fledged j career when he was graduated from Stockton in 1976. The Wetlands Institute and museum is a non-profit private oganization dedicated to public understanding of and concern for the coastal ecosystem. Located one mile west of Stone Harbor, it is open 10 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. daily except Sundays and Mondays. Admission is free. For further information, call 368-1211.

Neu> Veep i Richard E. Mo.wer, of the (Upper Township Board of Education, has been elected vice president for finance of the New Jersey School Boards Association. The election too place at the association's annual meeting June 9.

COME FEEL THE j MUSIC NEIL'S steaK & oyster house 222 e schoHenger avenue wiiOwood Dy the-sea, n i r (609) 522-6060

7 SOUTH MAIN STREET / / I \ <Ftvvefrn. SPa/nctt&ic/ie& LUNCH 11-3 EVENING 6-11 ' UeUctien </ Tf/rn'.j i tyut. , S-j,',, i AVALON - _ iT~~ MCHnUHW III fd hot blot 6 rhythm 6 blot kUyMPAA " ■ffm'lTlMp tpmikforthomt^vt 967-7333 , y 2401 DUNE DR. AVALON