22 Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 14 August '85 (
I SULLIVAN'S I DEPT. STORE summer sale! 40% off ; v • ALL SUMMER • LADIES' AND MEN'S • RUSS • IZOD • COLE • HAGGAR • CATALINA • HAYMAKER • ELIZABETH STEWAR+ SULLIVAN'S DEPT. STORE 'I/O I 'I M UK U M i IN I 111 "S IIAtn 7 AM 10 I'M l*< I . SI NIIAI
HI HI "I it II I . ^ ii . i rn itKi :a u s (AM iirt ) Mi"i >.|| •» .;,! Ill III it. M, tl, ,v Jijtl- \vf SI..IH- U.ilv.i (usol.tl .niS34W ( \ V j ^egtune gift Shop HAS THE SALE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR... 30%„„ OUR ENTIRE SUMMER COLLECTION of HANDBAGS, CLOTHES, and SHOES! 30%0FF SPECIAL SELECTION OF SUMMER JEWELRY Corner 96th & Third Ave. Open Dnily Stone Harbor 368-5131 9 A.M. -11 P.M.
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The women of Our Saviour Lutheran Church. 289 92nd St. will be holding a summer attic sale in their new Parish Hall Saturday. Aug. 24. the day of the annual Sidewalk Sale in Stone Harbor. Hours will be from 10 a.m. 'til 2 p.m. and kitchen custodians will be serving a light lunch at noon. Three groups are involved: Dottie Young heads the choirwoipen, Jane Scott heads the Women for Service and Dotty Stump is president of LCW. BIO WEEKEND coming up in Avalon. On Saturday. Aug. 24. the Avalon Home & landowners Association will hold a general meeting at Community Hall. 36th Street and the beach, at 10 a m Mayor Kachrl Sloan will address the top "Avalon. 1985 " Same day. same place but at 9 p.m.,
r there'll be a big band dance and the public is invited to I attend. r Sunday, Aug. 25. Avalon Garden Club will be holding an Island Party at e Grade O'Brien's home on Seventh Street. If you D didn't make reservations n for this today, we're afraid i you're out of luck. No s tickets will be issued at the e dodr. s ST. MAKY'S Episcopal J Church. 94th and Third f Avenue, will hold its annual Merchant's Day Bazaar Aug. 24. Just far enough j away from the madding crowd, they'll be serving e lunch in the Parish House, i This year they'll repeat the j successful Philadelphia i Pretzel table. !) Last year the men of the i . church who oversee this j department ordered 100 pretzels and sold out in less than an hour This year they have ordered 800! As usual, there will be a bake table, white elephants and crafts galore. For the . kids there will be a fish pond - KCW prexy, Mary Basford. was in Philadelphia last week buying the surprise gifts the kids will catch. She and her husband John killed two birds on their fishing expedition; they went to the Phillies' game that night since the strike was settled the night1 before There'll be an innovation too. For Ihe first time, there will be a table for new clothes which merchants have donated when they've had overruns. THE AUXILIARY of the Holy Redeemer Visiting Nurse Association is sponsoring a dinner benefit Sunday. Aug 25. at Ihe S.J. Wade Tavern and Restaurant. First and New Jersey Avenues. North Wildwood There will be open seating 4 10 pm for a chicken least Cocktails from the bar are on you Dress will be casual The Wade Tavern has the atmosphere of an old Cape May inn. which we unders tand it was Carol and Sieve Wade have been remodeling it for the past five years, doing the work themselves They restored and refinished the antique Victorian bar. booths and din ing room which seal 60 The private second -floor dining rooms are attractive too June ( Mrs John" Condon arranged the event and says chairing it "was a breeze, thanks to the Wades " Neighbors of John P. Halt have received notification by registered mail of a "major subdivision" of lots Hall owns at 8433 Third Ave. in Stone Harbor A public hearing had been scheduled by the plan ning board for Aug 26th to weigh the merits of his proposal. • Herbert L. tlornsby. building inspector, told us that while the proposal to subdivide Hall's lots arrived iA the Aug 9 mail, plans and specifications were not submitted in time and the hearing would have to be postponed ^ HALL'S CURRENT
plans are to divide land he holds to allow for the construction of two. possibly three, single-family dwellings. Zoning Board requirements are that specifications and documents (if any) be in the inspector's office (second floor. Borough Hall) at least 10 days' prior to the hearing and available to the public. It now looks like those plans will be discussed at a Sept. 9 work session and the Sept. 23 regular meeting. Serving on the board which will make the final decision are: Councilman Robert Sellers, chairman. Mayor Arden Hand; Councilman Eric Arenberg: Ted Pain, borough administrator; John Konine: Marleno Casper: George Walters and Hill Fox. JUST RECEIVED our copy of the ROA News Bulletin edited by A. Wayne Robinson, executive secretary of the Realty Owners' Association of Stone Harbor, which has reached its highest number of members thus far; 1.128 households paid up through 1985. It began in 1952 with 125 members. In answer to a questionnaire about a new community center sent by the School Boacd-Borough Council Joint Committee. ROA polled its own membership for input, and received 386 replies, mailed back at the owners' ex pense. Of these. 212 voted against the proposal. 108 voted "yes" and 65 were undecided THE NEWS bulletin stated: "Those who supported the proposal also liked the idea of an indoor pool Those against it cited probable large costs in building such a facility, with or without a pool, but particularly costly if a pool is included -" • So far we have answered throe of these polls, all have had similar response It will l»e interesting to find what, if any. impact they'll have on its proponents Saturday. Sept 7. at to a m ROA will hold its general meeting at the public school. 93rd and 3rd Avenue Councilman llarr> Slrohmrtz and John Hussrll. nationally-known
municipal consultant, will speak on "Rising water 4 rates and large increase we must pay for sewage disposal ". ERNIE BLAIR, who masterminds the Art Show Under the Tent each year, was sorely missed > this summer. He was stricken by illness two weeks before but he has it all so well organized that his wife, Ruthie. who runs the Crafts Show the following day, stepped in and ran both without a hitch. (Ernie is home now and recuperating beautifully.) Helping Ruthie were their son. Rick, and nice guy Jack Bennett. She also got an assist from the weather, which promised and produced a perfect day. WINNERS OF awards were: For Watercolors - 1st, William C. Ressler. Philadelphia; 2nd. Robert O'Connor. Stephenson. Va.; 3rd, Lou Messa. Madison. Va. Oils - 1st. Richard Christian. Litchfield. Conn.. 2nd. Ron Dembosky. West Chester. Pa.. 3rd. I)e lores ~ Landry. Springfield. Va. * Mixed Media - 1st. Janice Kline. Lynchburg. Va.. 2nd. Al Goldfarb. Woodland Hills. Ca.; 3rd. Marilyn Chaekman. Ventnor. Prizes were $150 for first. $100 for second and $50 each for third in all classes. Grand Prizes were: $300 Stone Harbor Purchase Prize to Michael Budden of Roebling. N.J. and the $250 Cape May Cultural Heritage Society Award to Jeffrey Filbert of eartrgen. G E N E R A L L Y . postcards are interesting only to the recipient and maybe we're prejudiced in this case because it came from our daughter. Maris Clement, who is touring China with her college roommate. It was postmarked Beijing and reads: "THis place fascinating. Shanghai left me cold The Great Wall extremely impressive and steep to climb Food is ghastly, eel. goldfish with heads, duck foot soup. I lost a big filling, the goods news, a temporary cost $1 78. the bad new s — it will take 4 days to dry P.S. I juSt ate camel unknowingly' "
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