20 Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 21 August '85
' \ A I nique Chocolate Shop lrr>p°ft^ The Finest Chocofate Available c ^orq • palate Pleaser Of The Week • f//"s aMISH-MOSH BARK © . milk of dark chocolate special $6.00 lb. __ • SPECIAL HOURS fRI.. AUG. 21 10 AM-12 MIDNIGHT' — M & 2rl VILLAGE SHOPPES OF RIO GRANDE
c^cmnG VILLAGE SHOPFES OF RIO GRANDE — ROUTE 47 I the optical room ■I li'Aert- there's fashion eyewear for everyone! r COUPON 1 I Iget ONE M j FREE j « trJtT .1 1 umpk-tc p.m ill eyeglasses using any frame in our store wl J J • .iikI pick .i tree pair »f glasses using the same Rx. Not just any \ j I J tram. Ki.i «»ui own l).R. Optical Frames. Your free pair can he \ omR EXPIRES / I ' clear . "i tinted lor sunglasses The lenses can be plastic or glass. \ AU0.S1.1989 /« j I Kiioc. iM Id extra. Offer valid for FT 25 or 28. or TK bifocals on- / li | U So oilier discount valid on this special. Not good on prior ! . j orders I vpires Aug. 31. 1985. Special good with this coupon ;! I COUPON ■' ™ -r- ZT-: *1 j L7M fr— RIO GRANDE MARMORA ATLANTIC CITY TUCKERTOi ABSECON VENTNOR vuimi worm nMOiivlit umaiumik Muni wvmiitKonsr mm w Ninon 'MUii.tr tivo tviNuf ww imp n mi tnaut ^^^^1 ; ! 1 1 1 ' 1 ) ' ! ■ | 1 ) 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 j I ! U 1 | ! 1 1 ! ! I If! II I 1 1, 1 I V X 3 4 S C V 8 V W a 11 & » >
} Sept. Trade Expo Just For Seniors
CAPE MAY - This Victorian resort community, which rolls out the red carat for senior citizens eacn^eptember, is offering a new attraction for two i days— The South Jersey ; Senior Citizens Trade Exs po— at Convention Hall. * The expo, which is free, will be held Sept. 21 and 22, Saturday and Sunday. It is designed to appeal to the many needs aw interests of seniors, racing from . health to retirement | communities. DISPLAYS WILL be set I up throughout Convention I Hall and will be manned by I specialists from related I fields. Free coffee and I doughnuts will be served I both days and visitors will I be able to get blood I pressure readings and other .medical checks. L Prizes, which will in- • elude dinners for two at popular restaurants, will be awarded every half hour on both days. In addition, exhibitors will have samples and give aways at their display areas. THE EXPO coincides with the annual city-wide festivities of fall, which are
popular with seniors, including historic tours, sightseeing and various types of entertainment. Exhibiting in the show will be health care, adult housing communities, financial institutions, brokerage firms, vacation areas, travel agencies, surgical, leisure living and many others. Seniors will be able to talk with representatives from many fields about the newest products and services available to them. ACCORDING TO Frank X. McGurrin, president of Expo Productions, producers, the show will have a festive atmosphere where seniors can casually stroll, talk with professionals and business executives. have their blood pressure checked, enjoy free refreshments and have a chance of winning a prize. Show hours are 10 a.m. - 9 p.m. Saturday, Sept. 21, and 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Sunday, Sept. 22. Businesses and services interested in exhibiting can contact Expo Productions at 201-255-5469.
The Telltale Signs Of Insect Pests
To many home gardeners, insect infestations seem like phantom invasions of invisible ehemies. But according to Larry Newbold. Cafpe May County Agricultural Agent, all insect pests leave identifying signs as they do their destructive work, and if the gardener is alert enough to watch for these clues, he can control the problem before it gets out of hand. Some insects are easily recognized, like the tomato hornworm, which is comparatively large and feeds during daylight hours. But other insects are microscopic in size or feed under cover of darkness. These pests are readily recognized by the damage they do. THOUGH APHIDS are less than 1/8 inch long, they give themselves away by the sticky, silvery streaks of honey dew they secrete. A trail of ants often leads you to an aphid infestation because ants frequently feed on these honeydew secretions. Aphids reduce plant vigor by sucking out the plant's sap. But their secretions are also an idea! medium for the growth of sooty mold, a black fungus that spreads ovr the leaves and interferes with photosynthesis. The gardener who blames aphids for his plant's problems without actually seeing the pest is probably right Worldwide there are thousands of species of these so-called "plant lice" and they are attracted to all vegetables and most other garden plants. BEETLES, however, are the most varied and numerous members of the insect world. There are over a quarter million species of them, with some
26,000 different species in North America alone. Though some beetles are beneficial, such as the firefly grub and the ground beetle, many beetles can be damaging, assaulting plants both as adults above the ground and as grubs feeding within the soil. One way to identify the "bad" beetles is to note the occurrence of garden and yard simultaneously. Bright colored Japanese beetle adults chew on the leaves of young vegetables while their grubs feed on the roots of grasses, leaving bare or brown areas on your lawn. GARDENERS should take special note if they see what appear to be small houseflies early in spring, just about the time young cabbages are set out. This is the egg-laying period for flies, and when their eggs hatch in the soil, they head for their favorite hosts. Carrot rust fly maggots burrow down to feed on the root tips of carrots, parsley, and celery; cabbage maggots feed on broccoli, Brussels sprouts and cabbages, and the onion maggot feeds on bulbs. Although the common red spider mite is almost too small to see. it spins webs that cover the undersides of leaves and extend from one leaf to another. This causes rose leaves to turn colors that range from red to gray to brown, -and gives the foliage of most other plants a sickly yellowhue. THE CYCLAMEN mite does not spin a web but it signals its arrival in flowering plants by producing distorted, streaked, or blotched blooms that fall early, while the leaves are left purplish and curled.
COLLEGE-BOUND — Joseph J. Felsman Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Felsman Sr.. 709 Wayne Ave.. North Cape May. has been accepted as a freshman at Allegheny College. Meadville, Pa. lie is a 1985 graduate of Lower Cape May Regional High School. JAMS* be Hawaiian JAMS' be Memphis JAMS* be Retro JAMS* be Floral JAMS' beGrafix JAMS* be Clash JAMS* be Fresh • ■•■■■■•■■■a ■ ■■■■■■•■•■a aaaaaaaaaaaa aaaaaaaaaaaa CHEEKS BE JAMMING! aaaaaaaaaaaa 101 OCEAN STREET CAPE MAY. NJ 08204 (609)884-8484 OPEN DAIIY 9 30 AM-jO-.OO PM / "^7^^ * 1 M / • f*6m I Wpptm W J[ FOR f m THE 1 BIRDS CAPE MAY'S NEW SHOP, FOR YOU, The Nature Lover ... The Bird Lover ... 221 Jackson St. 884-7152 Donate Blood together. American Red Cross

