2 Herald & Lantern 10 October '84
384-4484 AClltiAh Carpenter Square ' 31 Perry Street P.O. Box 599 JOE & JEANNE FAHY Cape May. N.J 08204
Tcvs [ pharmacy
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P -v CORN SILK B "LIOUID MAKE-UP ■ Assorted Shades ■ •TRANSLUCENT ■ MICRON POWDER Loose o< Pfessed I I YOUR CHOICE I 177 H Ou' Rpg 3 47 ea I I r
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I .| nm Y\I rf ONLY
■ •vaLOw ZONKERS ■ • FIDDLE m FADDLE All Types 5 ounce - 7 ounce YOUR CHOICE I 211 j Our Regular 79" ea ™ m
Jlawn&leaf jl^jm f 39 Gallon Capacity _ jf# Heavy Strength «W# 10 count :jl I 1*9|jjl I i wmmmammmm—mm
' DOVE BEAUTY BAR 55* Our Regular B9••a
CVS MAXI PADS Regular or Super 30 count -|99 COMPARE TO Staylrae Maxi Pads 3CTS at 3JB9
I AQUA-FRESH TOOTHPASTE With Fluoride 6 4 ounce 117 Our Regular i 69 I
scon BABY FRESH WIPES Scented or Unscented 60 count 229 I Our Regular 3 49
-I 25c BIC « ^SABLE Nfl M LySEL— M Our Regular 79 ea B — I
I™-! ■ jP SI JOSEPH n ASPIRIN ( I aj '•> COLORE* - II IP SI JOSEPH , n ASPIRIN . IV RJBCWOtEti i | J, ■ !
st. joseph aspirin For Children Orange Flavored 2 FOR . 99" Our Regular 67^ ea
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funtktones oflldrbts chewable vitamins Regular or Plus Iron 60 count 269 Our Regular 4 19-4 49
" cvs I. nasal cvs q1 decongestant S^nT^T TABLETS S . COMPARE TO Added Tablets 24's it 3.49 , |
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cvs vttammc tablets 1000 mg 100 count 299 Our Regular 4 63
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I SHAMPOO or CONDITIONER 12 ounce. All Types _ YOUR CHOICE I 188 Our Regular 2 99 ea ■
STICK or ROLt-ON DEODORANT 2 5 07 -3 QZ-. Honeysuckle 188 I CHOICE Our Regular 2 77-267
^^NATURAL TOOTHPASTE Cinnaminl or Spearmint 3 ounce. With Fluoride 99s Our Regular 1.67
VR^vr^iec 1 1 i \ 30 — V I
Imyadec tablets I 100 With 30 Free I 130 count Total m 9.39 IT. 5.89 S £ST -1.00 Y0UR M DO RIAL /I89 *T
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tussy j •Roll-On * Anti-Perspffant Regular or Unscented • Sock Deodorant 2 13 ounce •Cream Deodorant 2 ounce YOUR CHOICE 89' Our Regular 1 39 ea
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f bracks x i candy corn 16 ounce Bag 99' 1
'A © Dm ROE NT II V J
" ■ arm & hammer . , liquid . ■ \ dethigent ! 1" " | Oy Regular 2 99 •
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I <Wi*t»cm I m 3 K.hx ■ ~ 1 B"—
dABY POWDER P Our Regular 1 77
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BABY SHAMPOO ■J88 Our Regular 2 89 ^ nevuiar i ay
tilKt ! SAVE \ ■ OVwrkTI90'46" 1 I swate^j^^ ■
DOUBLE-TIPPED ■ I SWABS 300 Wrth 100 Free B 400 count Total. Bonus Pack . 159 | Our Regular 2 49
|^l#0 CAPE MAY COURT HOUSE 1— . mM South Dennis Road IT» rSrrn & Magnolia Drive pharmacy 465-90io Mi^H B HI HH
NORTH WILDWOOD I 26th & Delaware Ave. I (A & P Plaza) 729-5300 •' ■
IVINELAND Cumberiand Mall PI Delsea Drive \# W t^9 I jct Rtes. 47 & 55 h*«lth a b«suty aids fll
From The Principal T- ~ I ' By Stanley KrKzen | Principal, Lower Cape May Regional High School
We held a ninth grade parents orietation last week, the purpose of which was to help those responsible for the Lower Cape May Regional Class of 1988 to prepare for the next four years. There was a brief presentation from Bill Ackley,
assistant principal, about our attendance policy, an explanation of our guidance services and cur ricular planning by Pat Pii*t> and 9th grade counselor Ljonel Desrosiers, followed by a -series of presentations by our subject area super-
visors and department chairpersons. I told the parents in attendance that these next four years would fly by. I hope it is a safe flight. BOB FISHER and Arthur Marx wrote a play entitled The Impossible Years about this journey. If these
L years are not impossible ; they can be filled with turbulence, and while you are I living the experience they ! may appear to be endless. These are the years that your youngster will learn to I drive, will be around kids who drink and smoke, will explore sex and quite possibly reject any and all adult advice. These will be the years when those pleasant, sharing, children turn mute and secretive. Their appearance may change drastically along with their taste in just about everything including their friends — and there is really not much their parents can do about these events except hang on to the knowledge that their youngsters need them now in a very different way. FOR THE PAST five ' years I sat in a high school office and dealt almost exclusively with the catastrophes — the crashes. Between 7 a.m. and 4 p.m. each day I saw virtually no one who wasn't in trouble — youngsters and their parents. The troubles were academic or social or . psychological and sometimes all of the above. The trouble is democratic and has a knack for cutting across all social lines and academic programs. It happens to parents who are doctors, and those who are blue collar workers. It happens in two-parent and single-parent families, and it happens to those who have spent years providing everything possible for their children as well as to those parents who have spent virtually no time with their youngsters at all. EVERYTHING IS perspective. Mark Twain gives us the best sense of that perspective in his statement that when he (Twain) was 18 years old he couldn't believe that his own father was so stupid. By the time Mark Twain has reached 21 he was amazed to find out howsmart his old man had become in just three years. We all must persevere during these years (I am the father of a 10th grader and an 8th grader) through the belief that we have given our youngsters the guidance necessary for them to make the right decisions during the critical movements that will arise between now and the time they graduate from high school. We must cautiously learn to let go of the reins so they can grow up to make good choices. During these years parenting is a lot like teaching your child to ride a two-wheeler. There is no way he or she can learn unless you let go, and letting go is so difficult the first time because you don't want to see your child / fall. If there is a secret it is TJ jn knowing when to let go. If your timing is right these will not be the impossible years, and we will all have a safe trip.
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