Sie sind auf Seite 1von 32

VOLUME 5 | ISSUE 14 | MAY 16, 2012

I NS I DE : PRIZEWEEK PUZZLE: PG. 4 PET CARE LUNCH ON LANDIS FRANK HARTMAN AT NEPTUNE
The regions grocery shopping
scene is changing, which
should help Cumberland
County fight its #1 ranking in
poverty and obesity.
{ BY SHARON HARRIS-ZLOTNICK }
C
L
A
S
S
IF
IE
D
S
P
a
g
e
3
1
A
s Americas population has
expanded, so has its collective
waistline. Childhood/adult obesity
rates have reached epidemic proportions,
which impacts personal health and pub-
lic budgets. Prior generations of children,
who walked long distances to school,
were physically active throughout their
day. Unless todays children engage in
sports, their sole physical exertion may
be limited to reaching for their phone,
remote or computer.
Numerous studies link obesity with
poverty, poor diet and inadequate sleep.
The number of children and teens with
Type 2 diabetes has jumped at an alarm-
ing rate. The New England Journal of
Medicine recently published a four-year
study of 699 children, age 10 to 17, across
the U.S. It revealed that the number of
The Friends of Historic Vineland is sponsoring the 15th
annual Founders Day, marking 151 years of Vineland history.
The fun begins this Friday evening, 7 to 9 p.m. with the
Camp By Candlelight. Civil War re-enactor storytellers gather
in a camp setting by lantern and firelight, with live period
music by the Piney Hollow Drifters. Also featured are the
Sicilian-American Club and the Italian Culture Foundation
presenting the Girabaldi Regiment of the Civil War era.
On Saturday, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 50 historical exhibi-
tions will tell the history of Vineland, including a salute to
Vineland inventions and innovations with Dr. Welch onstage.
Musical entertainment features the JOY Senior Dancers (see
page 30) with a patriotic and gospel salute in celebration of
National Older Americans month in May.
For the kids, there will be field games, crafts, pony rides,
scavenger hunts, and more
It all takes place on the Elwyn Grounds (formerly the
Training School of Vineland) on Landis Avenue just east of
Main Road in Vineland.
All activities are free and open to the public, with plenty of
parking available. Select food vendors will be selling their
goodies.
Youll walk away with a greater awareness and community
pride in the rich and diverse history of Vineland. Through his-
torical and cultural arts education programs and family-
friendly celebration events such as Founders Day, a vision for
the future is imparted to the youth of Vinelandthe next gen-
eration of history makers in the City of Vineland.
175 S. Main Road & 1234 W. Landis Avenue, Vineland, NJ 856.690.1234 Se Habla Espaol CapitalBankNJ.com
Member FDIC
Rate guaranteed, as a minimum, through 7/4/2012; interest rate may vary thereafter. Offer may be withdrawn at any time without previous notice. Fees may reduce earnings. *Annual Percentage Yield (APY).
0.75
%
APY* SAVINGS
Rate Guaranteed to July 4
Our Focus Is You.
Farewell
to the
Fat
The Delsea Drive ShopRite (above) will be replaced by a new super-
market a mile away on West Landis Avenue next year. The Bottino
family expects groundbreaking on the new site (top) next month and
has received incentives to provide more healthy choices in its aisles.
CONNECTI NG YOU TO SOUTH JERSEY. WEEKLY.
Continued on page 14
Founders Day Fun for All Ages
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:33 PM Page 1
Tree Hugger Shares Insight
Im a self-proclaimed tree hugger. Some
people snicker when I say that. As if being a
tree hugger is a bad thing. Well, if wanting
the best things for my community and the
people in it is a bad thing, then Im guilty.
Trees give life to a community. They
increase property values, provide oxygen
that we breathe, soak up rain waters,
which slows down stormwater runoff and
flooding, provide shade in the heat of the
summer and windbreaks in the cold of the
winter. Trees provide food and shelter for
humans and other animals. They give us
beauty to look at and have been shown to
instill calming of our souls.
Trees do all of us a lot of good. Lets
keep them and take care of them. If you are
weed whacking, make sure to take care to
not weed-whack against the tree. Stripping
a tree bark can girdle a tree and cause it to
get sick and die. When you are planting a
tree, dont pile up mulch against a tree in
what are commonly called tree volcanoes.
A trees roots need to breathe. Piling up
mulch doesnt let the tree breathe and
allows less water to get to the tree roots.
Ivy growing up a tree robs the tree of
nutrients, destroys the trees bark, com-
petes for sunlight and adds excess weight.
If ivy is growing up a tree, cut the ivy at its
base. The rest of the ivy will die.
Find out the height, width, root sprawl,
seed droppings, soil type, and care of the
tree before you plant it.
If you see a tree that has no leaves, it may
be dead or it may be a late bloomer. Trees
get their nutrients and water from their
outer layers. The inner core or heart is not
alive. Trees that have hollow cores are not
dead. Hollow core trees are more flexible
than solid core trees. (Just imagine the flexi-
bility of a hollow plastic pipe as opposed to
a solid core plastic pipe). Thus hollow core
trees may be safer in high winds.
National Arbor Day has just passed, but
lets always all try to be a little bit of tree
hugger inside ourselves. It is not a bad
thing. It is a good thing.
For more information about trees, you
can go to the Arbor Day Foundation web-
site at www.arborday.org.
David Lowenstern
Environmental Commission member
Pictured from left: Sue Fenilli
(Environmental Commission member),
Mayor Bob Romano, and David Lowenstern
(Environmental Commission member)
Class Rank Controversy
I can understand the desire and drive of the
students to achieve the rank of class vale-
dictorian. Unfortunately, there currently
seems to be too many ways students can
gain unfair advantage over other students
in their pursuit of academic excellence.
I would suggest the following changes
be effective for the coming academic school
year in September. Coursework successfully
completed at the high school complex will
be the only determining factor in arriving at
class rank. Any classes completed outside of
the Vineland High School campus will be
for student enrichment purposes only and
not have any bearing in calculating the
grade point average. Students should not be
allowed to skip lunch to take an additional
course to inflate their grade point average.
All students MUST have a lunch period.
Advance Placement courses that the stu-
dents take should continue as they have in
the past.
Guidance counselors play a pivotal role
as they advise the students concerning their
course selections throughout their four
years at VHS. These changes would make
for a more level playing field for all students.
David M. Levin, Vineland
{
2
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
To qualied buyers: See dealer for complete details on select
models. Price includes all rebates & dealer incentives. Price
includes all costs except tax, tags and licensing fees. Not
responsible for typographic errors. All prices plus taxes, tags, and
title, plus doc. Fee. Factory rebates in lieu of special nancing.
BEST SELECTION...
view all of our inventory online
www.bobnovick.com
808 N. Pearl St., Bridgeton, NJ
(856)451-0095
DODGE
TRUCKS &
BUBBA AT
BOB NOVICK
Bob Novick
Sells Dodge
Trucks.
50 Dodge
Trucks
Available.
DODGE
TRUCKS TRUCK
E G OD D
G D DO
KS
E
E
BOB NOVI
A A BB BU
S K C TRU
E G OD D
K IC
T AAT
& S
E
Sells Dod
Bob Novi
dge
ck
vailabl AAvailable.
rucks TTrucks
50 Dodg
rucks. TTrucks.
Sells Dod
e
s
ge
.
dge
(856)451-0
808 N. Pearl St., Bridge
.bobnovick.co www
view all of our inventor
BEST SELECTI
b t i li f t F ee. F l d titl
All prices p responsible for typographic errors.
tags and licen xcept tax, ludes all costs e inc
ludes all rebates & dealer i Price inc models.
o qualied buyers: See dealer for complete T
title, plus doc. F Factory rebates in lieu of sp
vailabl AAvailable.
0095
eton, NJ
om
ry online
ION...
i l i
and tags, plus taxes,
Not nsing fees.
Price ncentives.
details on select
ecial nancing.
e.
Tell Us About Dad
Okay, now its Dads turn. We are
looking for your stories about your
dad, father-in-law, father to your
children. Tell us what makes (or
made) him special. If possible,
include a photograph of you and
that special dad.
Deadline for submissions: June 6
Send your story and photo to:
The Grapevine
907 N. Main Rd., Ste 205
Vineland, NJ 08360
Share Your Cruisin Memories
We are looking for your recollec-
tions of cruising Landis Avenue.
Whether from the 1950s, the 80s,
or anywhere in between, share
your stories in an upcoming com-
memorative issue. Your photos
also needed!
Deadline for submissions: May 30
Send your story and photo to:
The Grapevine
907 N. Main Rd., Ste 205
Vineland, NJ 08360
{
STAFF
}
{
CONTENTS
}
MIKE EPIFANIO Editor & Publisher
DEBORAH A. EIN Managing Editor
GAIL EPIFANIO Controller
MARIE HALPIN-GALLO Advertising Executive
MICHELLE LOW Advertising Executive
MARCY D. CARTER Advertising Executive
TRACY BUSCHAM Graphic Designer
RYAN DINGER Editorial/Sales Assistant
The Grapevine
907 N. Main Rd., Ste. 205, Vineland, NJ 08360
PHONE: 856-457-7815 FAX: 856-457-7816
EMAIL: letters@grapevinenewspaper.com
WEB: www.grapevinenewspaper.com
The Grapevine is published on Wednesdays by
Grapevine News Corp. Copyright 2012. All
rights reserved.
1 Farewell to the Fat
The addition of food shopping
options should change the regions
high ranking in obesity.
SHARON HARRIS-ZLOTNICK
1 Founders Day
3,5,6, Faces in the News
4 Prizeweek Puzzle
8, 24 In Our Schools
10-13 HOME & GARDEN
15 News in Brief
16 DINING: A Real Italian
Market
Guiseppes in Buena is the newest
in the region. FRANK GABRIEL:
18 Recipe Corner
Some healthy ways to start your
day. LISA DINUNZIO
20-21 PET CARE
22 Community Calendar/
Sports
25 REAL ESTATE
28 1940 Snapshot
Check out the 1940 census for an
idea of how and where your ances-
tors lived. VINCE FARINACCIO
29 Lunch on Landis
Lunch for $8 today through next
Tuesday at select eateries.
TODD NOON
30 Entertainment
31 CLASSIFIEDS
Letters to the Editor
I
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 2
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
3
}
Faces in the News
I
SEND US YOUR FACES. ITS FREE!
Get your photos published in The Grapevine... birthdays, engagements, weddings,
anniversaries, births, graduations, awards. Send them to the address listed on p. 2.
Happy 2nd Birthday
To Landyn Reese Ferrari, our beauti-
ful birthday girl,
Having you in our lives has not only
been one of the greatest joys for us, but
another reason to thank God for every-
thing He has given us. You, our
Princess, have turned our lives into a
fairytale. We look forward to watching
you grow and are so grateful to be a
part of your life. You make us so proud
and we love you more and more each
day.
We wish you a million wishes for
your birthday!
Happy 2nd birthday to a very special
angel!
Love always,
Daddy, Mommy, Big Brother
Greyson, Big Sisters Arden & Addy,
Mom-Mom, Pop Pop, MiMi, Mom-Mom,
Pa Buzzy, Aunt Cathy, Uncle Dom, Aunt
Sarah, Payton, Phil, Uncle John, Aunt
Sarah, and Luci.
Arroyo Graduates
On Friday, May 11, Charissa M.
Burgos Arroyo graduated with Rowan
University class of 2012.
Arroyo graduated with a Bachelor
of Science in Finance and a minor in
Communications.
Happy Mothers Day
Youre amazing, Mom
I mean
all you did,
all you do,
how you live,
how you love...
Amazing!
Happy Mothers Day
With Love,
Margie, Marie, Katie, Jimmy,
Missy & Ollie
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 3
{
4
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
800-582-7640
www.SouthJerseyFCU.com

Additional coverage up
to $250,000 provided by
Excess Share Insurance
Corporation, a licensed
insurance company.
THIS IS BIG NEWS!
Spread the word...tell your family and
friends so they can take advantage of
THE LOWEST RATES IN SOUTH JERSEY
FEDERAL CREDIT UNION HISTORY!
2.99% up to 5 years... 1.99
%
*
UP TO 6 YEARS!
3.49% up to 5 years... 2.99
%
*
UP TO 6 YEARS!
APR
APR
3.49% up to 5 years.....2.99
%
***
UP TO 7 YEARS!
3.99
%
***

UP TO 15 YRS! 4.99
%
***

UP TO 20 YRS! APR APR
APR
*Auto loan rates quoted are for Premier Plus category, up to 6 years and includes one-half percent (0.5%) reduction in rate
for payroll deduction or direct deposit. Auto loan promotional rates are for new loans only. SJFCU renances not included.
Premier Plus category requires a minimum FICO score of 700.**Used car rate applies to model years 2009 and 2010 and
2011/2012 models with over 15,000 miles. Other rates and terms available to qualied borrowers. ***Home Equity loan rates
apply to new and renanced loans in Premier Plus category with automatic payment such as payroll deduction. e APR
without automatic payment is one-half percent (0.5%) higher. Premium Plus and Classic Plus categories require $25,000
or more of new money on renanced loans and $10,000 or more on new loans. All other Premiere and Classic categories
require $15,000 or more of new money on renanced loans. is product is a xed rate, closed-end loan secured by your pri-
mary residence and is equal to up to 75% loan-to-value including your 1st mortgage balance, if any. Closing costs included
in rate. Title insurance required for loan amounts over $100,000. Other auto and home equity loan rates and terms available
to qualied borrowers are based on credit approval. All rates and terms subject to change at any time at the discretion of
the credit union.
HOME EQUITY LOAN RATES
USED** AUTO LOAN RATES
106 West Landis Avenue - Vineland
NEW AUTO LOAN RATES
OWEST R THE L
friends so they can tak
Spread the word...tell your family and
THIS IS BIG NEWS!
TES IN SOUTH JERSEY AATES IN SOUTH JERSEY T R
e advantage of hey can takke advantage of
word...tell your family and
S BIG NEWS!
UTH JERSEY
dvantage of
r family and
NEWS!
AL CREDIT UNION HISTOR FEDER RAL CREDIT UNION HISTOR
OWEST R THE L
CREDIT UNION HISTOR
TES IN SOUTH JERSEY AATES IN SOUTH JERSEY T R
Y! HISTORRY!
UTH JERSEY
ear 5 y up t 2.99% 2.99% o 5 year
A O NEW AUTO L
APR UP T
*
%
1.99 ... s rrs
TES AATES AN R RA
! S AR O 6 YE T
ear y up t 3.49%
y p
3.49% o 5 year
ear y up t 3.49% o 5 year 3.49%
USED** AUTO L
HOME EQUITY L
UP T
*
%
2.99 s rrs...
UP T
***
%
2.99 ... s.. r
APR
r
TES AATES AN R RA O L
TES AATES AN R RA O Y L
APR
S! AR O 6 YE T
S! AR E O7 Y TTO 7 Y
.S www
O 15 Y UP T
***
%
3.99
emier P r r P o e ffo r d a e t uo es q t n raat a o lo t u *AAu
APR
est 106 W
yFCU erse SouthJ
800-582-7640
U
***
%
4.99 S! R 5 Y
e n udes o l c d in n s a r a e o 6 y p t , u yy, u r o eg t aat s c u l P
APR
V - enue v Landis AAv
.com
S! R O 20 Y UP T
e t n in ra io t uc d e t (0.5%) r cen er lf p a e-h
Vineland
n. t unio di e e cr h t
di e n cr d o e s a e b r s a er w o r r o d b lie aalie u o q t
n a a r lo o d ffo e uir q e ce r n ura s le in t i . T e t in raat
o 75% p t o u l t a u q s e d i n ce a esiden y r r a m
n y o e n o wm e f n e o r o r m e $15,000 o uir qquir e r
a lo d ce n a en n r y o e n o w m e f n o e r o r m o
lf p a e-h n s o t i en m y a ic p t aat m o t u t a u o h t i w
e r s in P n a d lo ce n a en d r n w a e o n y t l p p aap
les er 15,000 mi v h o t i s w l de o 2011/2012 m
u es a minim uir q e y r r o eg t a s c u l emier P r P
t. A osi t dep c e r dir n o io t uc d l de l o r y aay r p o ffo
q
. any insurance comp
Corporation, a licensed
Excess Share Insurance
to $250,000 provided by
Additional coverage up
c o t t c e j bbj u s s m er t d n a es t l raat l . A l va o r p p t aap i
m o d h n o a t u er aau h t er $100,000. O v ts o un o m a
e b g ga t r o t m ur 1s o g y udin l c ue in l o-va n-t a % lo
e t d raat e s a x t i uc d o r s p s. i n a d lo ce n a en n r
l o l A s. n a w lo e n n o e r o r m o d $10,000 n s a n a
d C n s a u l um P emi r . P er h t (0.5%) hig cen er p
t en m y aay ic p t aat m o t u h a t i y w r o eg t aat s c u l emier P
d lie a u o q qu le t b a l i va s a m er d t n es a t er ra at h t . O
li p p e a ap t r ra a d c e s f 700.**U e o r co O s C um FI
s n a w lo e r n o e f fo r es a t l ra a n io t o m o r n p a o lo t u AAu
y p , yy, u g
f n o io et cr s e di h t t e a at t im y t n t a aat a e g n a h
le b aab l i vaai s aava m er d t n es a t n ra a y lo t ui qu e e
d ude l c ts in g cos losin . C yy. C n , if a ce n a l a b
i r ur p o y y d b e ur c e n s a d lo d-en e los , c e
ies r o eg t aat c sic s a l C d n a e emier r P er h t o
e $25,000 uir q e ies r r o eg t a s c u l sic P s a l
R e AP n. io t uc d l de l o r y aay s p h a uc t s
es t n raat a y lo t ui q e E m o s. ***H er w o r r o b
d n d 2010 a n s 2009 a r a e l y de o o m es t
. d ude l c t in o ces n n a en JFCU r . S yy. S l n s o
( %) p
Note contest rules at the top of this page.
Readers can deposit their puzzles 24/7
in the drop-slot located in the vestibule of
South Jersey Federal Credit Union,
106 West Landis Ave., Vineland, NJ 08360.
Entries must be deposited by 8:30 am on Monday.
Or, completed puzzles can mailed to:
South Jersey Federal Credit Union
Prizeweek Puzzle
PO Box 5429
Deptford, NJ 08096-0429
Mailed entries must be received by 10 am on Monday.
HOW TO ENTER:
$ PRIZEWEEK PUZZLE $
ACROSS:
1. Chemistry students are
told, when they get jobs, to
expect _ as part of their
usual working environment.
3. The _ of an amateur
play might well be minimal.
5. When mother express-
es astonishment that for
hours, child ignored slash on
_, father claims son might
not have seen it.
6. Perform.
10. You would expect the
managing director of a big
company to insist on having
the best kind of _.
11. Claiming that serious
_ , if reported in the
media, would alarm the
public, news director is hes-
itant to take action.
12. To _ is, in a sense, a
step toward a process of
renewal.
15. It would certainly _ a
professional acrobat if he
fell while completing a
routine trick.
16. As well.
18. Tumble.
DOWN:
1. _ may, in many cases,
be fittingly described as
gallant.
2. Pupil complains that
teacher is overly critical of
her artwork, especially her
attempts to put _ in
pictures.
3. Friend advises that a _
entirely involved in finding
fault with other people is a
waste of ones attention.
4. Unemployed woman is
worried that her _ attitude
at interview might mean
shes rejected as driving
instructor.
7. Winning serve.
8. Beautiful _ may cer-
tainly inspire a poet.
9. Champion cyclist might
have considerable trouble
replacing _ that she lost.
13. Gourmet enthusiast
finds it hard to follow popu-
lar _ giving instructions
verbally on how to bone a
duck.
14. Department store
employee considers it worth
the extra work to dress
shop windows _.
15. Bride tries to impress
in-laws by using expensive
brands which she makes
obvious to them, including
her _.
16. Part of a car.
17. Having spent a lot on
prime seats at game, couple
is annoyed to find them-
selves next to excitable _.
THIS LIST INCLUDES, AMONG OTHERS,
THE CORRECT WORDS FOR THIS PUZZLE.
ACE
ACT
AIRS
ALSO
AXLE
BOOK
CAST
CHAP
CHAT
CHIN
COOK
COST
CRIMES
CRISES
DAILY
DIE
DYE
FALL
FAN
FIRS
GAILY
MAN
MEDAL
MEN
PEDAL
PEN
REPORT
RESCUER
RESCUES
RETORT
SHAKE
SHAME
SHIN
SOAP
SOUP
TENSE
TENT
TERSE
TINT
PRIZEWEEK 051212
Jackpot increases by $25 each week if
no winning entry is received!
$150
1. Solve the puzzle just as you would in
any crossword puzzle. Choose from each
printed clue the word that best fits the
definition. Write the answers in the blank
space provided in each puzzle until all
spaces have been filled in.
2. There is no limit to the number of times
you may enter, however no facsimiles or
reproductions will be accepted. Only original
newspaper entry forms will be accepted.
3. Anyone is eligible to enter except
employees/directors of South Jersey
Federal Credit Union (SJFCU) and the
Grapevine and their immediate families.
4. A basic prize of $50.00 will be awarded
to the winner(s) of each weekly Prizeweek
Puzzle. In the case of multiple winners, the
prize money will be shared. If no correct
puzzle entries are received, $25.00 will
be added the following week. Winners
agree to permit use of their names and
photos by SJFCU and/or the Grapevine.
5. Entries can be mailed to South Jersey
Federal Credit Union, Attn: Prizeweek
Puzzle, PO Box 5429, Deptford, NJ
08096, or dropped off 24 hours a day, 7
days a week in the vestibule of SJFCU,
106 W. Landis Avenue, Vineland. Mailed
entries must be received by SJFCU no later
than 10 am on the Monday following the
Wednesday publication of the Prizeweek
Puzzle. Entries dropped off at the SJFCU
Vineland branch must be received no
later than 8:30 am on the Monday fol-
lowing the Wednesday publication of the
Prizeweek Puzzle. SJFCU assumes no
responsibility for late or lost entries.
6. South Jersey Federal Credit Union
reserves the right to issue additional
instructions in connection with the
Prizeweek Puzzle. All such instructions
are to become part of the official rules.
Visit www.SouthJerseyFCU.com for list
of additional rules.
SOLUTION TO LAST WEEKS
PRIZEWEEK PUZZLE
For a full explanation of the answers to
last weeks puzzle and additional rules,
visit www.SouthJerseyFCU.com
This weeks jackpot
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 4
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
5
}
25 South Pitney Road
|
Galloway, NJ 08205
609.748.2400
|
www.the-carriagehouse.com
AN I CON HOSPI TALI TY CORPORATI ON
*Wedding must be booked by June 30, 2012, and must take place in January, February or
March of 2013 to receive this Winter White Wedding Special. Discount varies based
upon wedding date and other factors determined by the Carriage House sta.
Book your January, February or March 2013 wedding
by June 30, 2012. Youll save up to 15%* on your
Winter White Wedding, and youll have a chance to win:
GRAND PRIZE: DELUXE CASCADING
CHOCOLATE FOUNTAIN
A waterfall of warm milk chocolate complemented with pound cake,
marshmallows, biscotti, pretzel sticks, melon, banana and strawberries.
SECOND PRIZE: A FREE SMORES STATION
An indoor campre, along with an assortment of marshmallows,
graham crackers, and chocolate squares.
THIRD PRIZE: FREE CREATE YOUR
OWN CUPCAKE BAR
Chocolate chip, red velvet, vanilla and chocolate cupcakes with vanilla
buttercream, chocolate buttercream and cream cheese frostings. Toppings
include chocolate chips, M&Ms, Reeses Pieces and more.
FOURTH PRIZE: A FREE MARTINI ICE LUGE
A skillfully carved personal ice sculpture with a spirit luge
for a cool refreshment during your Cocktail Hour.
To enter the Winter White Wedding Windfall contest, call
(609) 748-2400, or email sales@the-carriagehouse.com, and
book your Winter White Wedding by June 30.
T H E CA R R I A G E HO U S E
Winter White
Wedding Windfall
Faces in the News
I
Standard Publishing Marks 120 Years
On May 4, staff members, townspeo-
ple, and select local government offi-
cials, including Vineland Mayor Robert
Romano, gathered at Standard
Publishing on Southwest Boulevard to
celebrate the businesss 120th year of
operation. Those in attendance were
given a tour of the facility, and also
enjoyed hors doeuvres and entertainment.
Mayor Romano presented the business with a certificate of recognition in
honor of their outstanding longevity, as theyve now been a mainstay in Vineland
since 1892.
Top: Mayor Romano (left) presents Barry Opromollo, president of Standard Publishing,
with a certificate of recognition. Right: Staff members take Mayor Romano and other
guests on a guided tour of the facility.
Habitat Breaks Ground on 20th Home in County
Ten gold shovels sunk in to the dirt Saturday morning, marking the official
ground breaking at the future site of the Leon family home at 1301 Regina Elena
Avenue. Representatives from Cumberland County Habitat for Humanity (CCHFH)
board of directors, Century Savings Bank, the Mayor of Vineland and many of
Habitat volunteers were on site to mark the official start of construction. The
future 1,200-square-foot home will be the 20th home built by CCHFH in
Cumberland County.
The single family, affordable home will be built with 500 hours of sweat equity
contributed by the Leon family, many hours of volunteer labor, and finances from
four grants. Century Savings Bank and the City of Vineland HOME funds are the
two largest sponsors of the build.
This build also marks the first Women Build project that CCHFH has done.
Women Build is an initiative created by Habitat for Humanity International to
encourage women to come on the jobsite.
Dave Hemple and Century Savings Bank came on board as a mortgage part-
ner with CCHFH last year. They have committed to donating $15,000 to the up-
front construction costs for three Habitat homes. That money will be repaid
through the homeowners future mortgage with zero percent interest over 20
years. The City of Vineland has approved a $45,000 grant to the CCHFH project.
The $45,000 being used for the project is federal funding earmarked for afford-
able housing in the city. United Way of Cumberland County is also a funding a
portion of the Habitat program through a $12,000 grant. Century Savings Bank
also sponsored CCHFH for a $10,000 grant from Federal Home Loan Bank of
New York that will be used for the project.
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 5
Compass Academy
Charter School
Completes Board of
Trustees Team
The Compass Academy Charter
School Board of Trustees has filled its
final vacancy with Morris Lopez, a long-
standing employee of the Department
of Justice and the parent of a child
attending the school this fall. Lopez
joins a committed group of volunteer
members who have been working since
February to establish a firm foundation
for South Jerseys latest and most inno-
vative public school.
With this new addition, the Compass
Academy Charter Schools Board of
Trustees consists of:
Sanford Tweedie (Board Facilitator),
Professor and Undergraduate Programs
Coordinator, Department of Writing
Arts, Rowan University;
{
6
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
I
Faces in the News
Detachment #205 Welcomes Young Marines
The Semper Marine Detachment #205
recently welcomed the South Jersey Young
Marines and their new administration to
their permanent home. Pictured here:
Young Marine Commander Ted Oniszczuk
(right) and Semper Marine Detachment
#205 Commandant Dewey Capriotti.
Commandant Capriotti is giving the key to
the building to Commander Oniszczuk in
front of the new sign the detachment
donated to the Young Marines. Below,
members of the South Jersey Young
Marines pose for a group picture outside of
their new home.
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 6
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
7
}
/DQGVFDSLQJ 6SULQNOHU 6\VWHPV
/DZQ 0RZLQJ )HUWLOL]DWLRQ DQG PRUH
856-692-8373
LEAFY GREEN COUPON
$
100
00
OFF
Any Sprinkler System
Valid for full yard, or $50 off for non full yard.
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not to be combined with any offer. Exp: 5/23/12
LEAFY GREEN COUPON
FREE
LAWN MOWING
With Full Year Contract
*New Customers Only
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not to be combined with any offer. Exp: 5/23/12
LEAFY GREEN COUPON
FREE
FERTILIZATION
APPLICATION
With Full Year Contract
*New Customers Only
Must present coupon at time of estimate.
Not to be combined with any offer. Exp: 5/23/12
NICU Named in Memory of Deborah F. Sager
South Jersey
Healthcare has opened
the Deborah F. Sager
Neonatal Intensive Care
Unit (NICU) at the
Regional Medical Center
in Vineland. This $6.5
million, 14,800-square-
foot expansion and reno-
vation of the nursery
brings advanced care for
premature, low birth-
weight and critically ill
infants to the region.
In support of this proj-
ect, the Deborah F. Sager
Memorial Fund provided
an initial pledge of
$250,000. In recognition
of the gift, the NICU has been named in Deborahs memory.
The Deborah F. Sager Memorial Fund was established in 1979 after the pass-
ing of Deborah F. Sager, the daughter of Penny Sager-Rossi and Dr. Eugene
Sager. To honor the memory of their daughter, monies raised through local
events were put into a restricted fund within the South Jersey Healthcare
Foundation for the purpose of enhancing SJHs childrens health care services.
After 33 years, the fund continues to grow.
This enhanced neonatal intensive care unit which will help so many vulner-
able babies to grow strongis an appropriate way for us to remember the joy
and love Debbie brought to us, said Penny Sager-Rossi.
SJH employees came together to raise $154,000 to support the Deborah F.
Sager NICU.
Penny Sager-Rossi presents Carolyn Heckman, executive director of the SJH Foundation,
and Chet Kaletkowski, president and CEO of SJH, with an initial donation on behalf of
the Deborah F. Sager Memorial Fund in the amount of $250,000.
Timothy Hack (Board Facilitator-
Elect), Professor of History, University of
Delaware;
Sandy Hearing, retired elementary
teacher with over 30 years experience;
Arthur C. Horn, EOF counselor and
adjunct professor at Cumberland
County College;
Diane Kolman, realtor with over 35
years experience;
Lynn Lichtenberger, Director of
Early Childhood Education, Cumberland
County College;
Morris Lopez, Probation Officer,
New Jersey Department of Justice;
Latifah Potter, Assistant Principal,
Pittsgrove Township School District;
Allison Spinelli, Division Director,
One Stop Administrator & Operations,
Cumberland County Office of Workforce
Development;
Joel Johnston (ex-officio), Executive
Director of Let Me Learn, Inc.
Pictured, opposite page:
Morris Lopez is sworn in as a member of
the Compass Academy Charter School
Board of Trustees.
SEND US YOUR FACES.
ITS FREE!
Get your photos published in The Grapevine...
birthdays, engagements, weddings,
anniversaries, births, graduations, awards.
Send them to the address listed on p. 2.
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 7
{
8
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
I
In Our Schools
UPPER DEERFIELD
1119Hwy 77, Carlls Corner
Bldg 2, Suite C
(Across from WalMart)
856.453.1555
VINELAND
1450 E. Chestnut Ave.
Bldg 4, Suite A
856.794.1700
Most insurances accepted
Same day, evening and Saturday
appointments available
Transportation available if you need a ride
Did you know that
patient out-of-pocket
costs for radiology tests
can dier by more than 100%
between providers? With so much on
the line, demand that your radiologist
tell you how much the test will cost
and compare the results between
qualied practices to ensure that you
get the best care at the best price.
Knowyour
RADIOLOGY RIGHTS!
CenterForDiagnosticImaging.com
Know your
OUT OF POCKET COST
before the exam
Trust CDI to cut through the
insurance red tape to nd your
out-of-pocket cost. Simply visit
our oce for more information.
Know your






RADIOLOGY RIGHTS!
Know your
ests adiology t or r ffor r osts c
et ck o -p of out- t tien pa
t w tha no ou k Did y


RADIOLOGY RIGHTS!
the e e or ef b
OUT OF POCKE
w y Kno


RADIOLOGY RIGHTS!


t the best pr e a get the best car
o ensur es t tic ac qualied pr
esults bet e the r ompar and c
est will c w much the t ou ho ell y t
our r t y , demand tha the line
ith so much on W viders? o een pr w bet
e than 100% y mor er b can di can dier b
gh the o cut throu rust CDI t TTrust CDI t


. e ic t the best pr
ou t y e tha o ensur
een w esults bet
ost est will c
ist adiolog our r
ith so much on
e than 100%
gh the




or F er t n e C
e for more informa our oc
impl . S . Simpl ost et c ck cket c o of-p out-
o nd y e t p a d t e re nc a insur
gh the


iagnosticImagin D or
tion. e for more informa
y visit impl imply visit
our o nd y o nd your


m o c . g iagnosticImagin
2012 EP Henry
www.recumminesinc.com
856-691-4040
67 CHESTNUT AVENUE VINELAND, NJ 08360
3.5%
SALES TAX
Oet youz )5((
2012 HazdscapIng
Pzoject OuIde!
COME SEE US AT THE
SPRINGTIME HOME
EXPO: MAY 19TH AND
20TH AT THE BUENA
CAMP GROUNDS


ND A INEL V VENUE AAVENUE 67 CHESTNUT
0 4 - 1 9 6 - 6 5 8
n i s e n i m m u c e r . w w w
X AAX TTA LES A S
3.5%


J 08360 N , ND
0 4 0
m o c . c n
Henry EP 2012


OuIde! Pzoject
HazdscapIng 2012
)5(( youz Oet
SHHS Students Celebrate Cinco de Mayo
Sacred Heart High
School Spanish Language
students along with their
teacher, Mr. Roque
Carmona, celebrated Cinco
de Mayo with a traditional
Mexican meal. This holiday
originated in Puebla,
Mexico to commemorate
the last foreign battle on
North American soil. The Mexican armys victory over the French army con-
tributed to the success of Union forces in the American Civil War. Cinco de Mayo
is now considered a legitimate American holiday.
Congressman Addresses Vineland Students
Congressman
Frank LoBiondo
was keynote
speaker at a
school-wide
assembly recently
at Landis Middle
School, and
addressed fifth
grade students at
Durand
Elementary School
as a culminating
event of their unit
on U.S. govern-
ment. The visits
were announced
by Hope Johnson,
Landis School Principal, and Dan Greco, Durand School Principal.
At both schools, Rep. LoBiondo, R-2, spoke about his career as a legislator and
his prior roles in local and state government. The Congressman has served in
Congress since 1994. At Landis, he spoke about the challenges facing our youth
the importance of working hard and getting good grades in school, furthering
their education, and the challenges of employment in a global economy with rap-
idly changing technology.
Rep. LoBiondo also spoke about his South Jersey roots, the influence of his
father, who he said "balanced the demands of running a business, holding elected
office, active community involvement, membership in his church and providing for
his family."
He then answered questions about his political career and personal life from
students Jeralis Melendez, Jayna Donoflio, Giovanni Cruz, and Taahira Thompson.
Congressman Frank LoBiondo addresses fifth graders at Durand Elementary School.
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 8
Rafferty Chosen Claes Nobel Educator
Delsea Regional High School teacher, James Rafferty was recently selected as
a Claes Nobel Educator of Distinction by The National Society of High School
Scholars (NSHSS). The award recognizes teacher role models who have made a
lasting difference in their classroom by encourag-
ing students to strive for excellence.
Rafferty has been a teacher of social studies
at Delsea School District since September 1971
when he started teaching 8th grade social stud-
ies. He moved to the high school in 1983, teach-
ing U.S. History II. He has also taught AP History
and was named Teacher of the Year for the high
school in 1986. He is currently teaching sociolo-
gy. Raff, as he is affectionately known to the stu-
dents, served as a class advisor for 12 years
working with three different graduating classes
and was an original committee member to the
Atheneaum League.
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e

g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
9
}


G
E
T
Y
O
U
R
B
E
A
C
H

B
O
D
Y
O
N
U
S
!
6
X
P
P
H
U

L
V

K
H
U
H

Ladies only workout room


with resistance training
equipment specic for
womans problem areas
Cardio Kickboxing
Extreme Kickboxing
Yoga
Zumba
Body Sculpting
MMA Conditioning
20/20/20
Cycling
Circuit Training
Apparel
Racquetball
Cardio Deck featuring
treadmills and elliptical
machines
Also Available:
Wellness Store
Personal Training
Tanning
Massage
Juice Bar
Pro Shop
118 Wheat Road, Buena, NJ 08310 856-697-3636
JOIN TODAY & RECEIVE:
June, July and August are FREE!
FREE Tanning for The Entire Summer &
One FREE Personal Training Session ($40 value)
Everything is Included with Your Membership:
*one time enrollment Iee
and 18 month contract applies
6
X
P
P
H
U

L
V

K
H
U
H

$19.99/month*
And The
Summer Is FREE!
N
E
W

MMA
Conditioning
Classes

















































































































































































































Conditioning
MMA
MMA
Conditioning
N
E
W
N
E
W
MMA



















July and June
JOIN TODA
Summer Is FREE!
$19.99/month*



















Summer Is FREE!
FREE! August ar July and
Y & RECEIVE: JOIN TODA JOIN TODAY & RECEIVE:
he T And
$19.99/month*



















FREE!
Y & RECEIVE:
Summer Is FREE!
$19.99/month*
Classes
Classes
Classes
Classes
Conditioning
Conditioning
Conditioning
Conditioning
Conditioning
Classes



















for specic equipment
training resistance with
room workout only Ladies
I
Personal
s i g n i h t y r e v E
FREE One
anning for TTanning for FREE
July and , June



















ling Cyc
20/20/20
Conditioning MMA room
M
aining Session ($40 v
r u o YYo h t i w d e d u l c n I
r TTr Personal
e Summer & The Entir anning for
FREE! e August ar July and



















raining TT ersonal P
Store ellness W
ailable: v Also A Also Av
:
alue)
p i h s r e b m e M
aining Session ($40 v
e Summer &
FREE!



















Sculpting y Bod
Zumba
oga YYoga
Kickboxing Extreme
Kickboxing Cardio
areas problem s woman
for specic equipment
118 Wheat Road,



















machines
elliptical and treadmills
turing fea Deck Cardio
Racquetball
pparel A
raining TTraining Circuit
ling Cyc
NJ 08310 856-697-3636 Buena, 118 Wheat Road,



















Shop Pro
Bar Juice
ge Massa
anning TTanning
raining TTraining ersonal P
NJ 08310 856-697-3636
and 18 month contract applies
*one time enrollment Iee
482 Tuckahoe Rd. Buena Vista, NJ 08310
856-696-1644
STORE HOURS: MON- FRI . 8: 30AM TO 6PM SAT. 8AM- 5PM SUN. 9AM- 3PM
FREE DELIVERY
ON 5 OR MORE YARDS
OF MULCH OR STONE*
*must be within 5 miles of store.
&RXSRQ
Exp. 5-23-12
Not to be combined with any other offer.
&RXSRQ
Exp. 5-23-12
Not to be combined with any other offer.
10% off All Bird
Food & Supplies
&RXSRQ
Exp. 5-23-12
Not to be combined with any other offer.
&RXSRQ
All Shrubs and
Trees - Buy One
Get One 50%Off
SOD
$
3
99
FOR 10 SQ. FT.
Exp. 5-23-12
Not to be combined with any other offer.
Annuals
9
99
PER FLAT
&RXSRQ
20% Off All
Lawn Decorations
482 Tuckahoe Rd. Buena Vista, NJ 08310
. SOD
99
Q S 0 1
SOD
R O F
3
$
SOD
1
SOD










482 Tuckahoe Rd. Buena Vista, NJ 08310 t *
OF MULCH OR STONE*
O 5 N O
FREE DELIVERY










t f l iil 5 i h t i b t
OF MULCH OR STONE*
S D R A Y E R O M R O
FREE DELIVERY
&RXSRQ










482 Tuckahoe Rd. Buena Vista, NJ 08310
6 5 8
&RXSRQ
1 6 9 6









482 Tuckahoe Rd. Buena Vista, NJ 08310 t s u m **m
&RXSRQ
4 4 6 1
&RXSRQ










. e r o t s f o s e lle iil m 5 n iin h t i w e b t
&RXSRQ &RXSRQ
CCC Students Inducted Into Alpha Beta Gamma
Thirty-nine
Cumberland County
College students were
recently inducted into
Alpha Beta Gamma,
the international busi-
ness honor society
that recognizes
scholastic excellence
among community col-
leges students.
To be eligible for
induction, business
students must main-
tain at least a 3.0 grade point average in business courses as well as a 3.0 over-
all cumulative average. For membership in Iota Upsilon, Cumberland County
Colleges ABG chapter, students must be enrolled in a business curriculum such
as Accounting, Business, Computer Science, Construction Supervision or Office
Administration degree programs.
Alpha Beta Gamma provides leadership opportunities, forums for the
exchange of ideas and stimulation of interest in continuing academic excellence.
Student inductees from Vineland include Erika Ahedo, Melissa Alonso, Cristina
Altreche, Sean Lent, Evelyn Lopez, Rudolph Luisi II, Aleeka Mitchell, Yasemin
Ozkan, Eddie Peters, Amanda Plecker, Agustin Santiago, Harry Springfield Jr.,
Alexis Taylor, Vickie Troth, Michael Williams and Meredith Wuzzardo.
Students from Millville include Iakeena Dairsow, Jaclyn Haas, Brian Harris,
Jenice Moha-Rodriguez, Erik Moore, Maryanne Tappen and Sandra Thompson.
Students from Bridgeton include Jessica Carrasco, Madelyn Dare, Pathik
Desai, Matthew Miller, John Neal and Mirian Pescador.
Others include Melissa Aponte of Williamstown, Cherie Bendyna of Ocean
City, Brittany Blue of Hammonton, Taryn Boggs and Karen Rude of Pittsgrove,
Timothy Davis of Shiloh, Stefany Levenknight of Newport, Danielle Sergiacomi of
Cedarville, Chris-Anne Snyder of Newfield, and Christopher White of Monroeville.
Grapevine 1-9 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:34 PM Page 9
Arbor Day Foundation
Offers Tree-Care Booklet
The Arbor Day Foundation is offering a
handy tree-care booklet designed to help
people plant and care for trees. Anyone
can receive the Conservation Trees
booklet by making a $3 donation to the
Foundation.
The booklet provides details about the
right way to plant and prune trees. It also
includes tips on using shade trees and
windbreaks to save on energy costs,
attracting songbirds and creating a living
snow fence.
To receive the Conservation Trees
booklet, send a $3 check along with your
name and address to: Conservation Trees,
Arbor Day Foundation, 100 Arbor Ave.,
Nebraska City, NE 68410, or order online
at arborday.org/conservationtrees.
Adopt-A-Highway
Program
Giordanos Recycling is one of the first
participants in the New Jersey
Department of Transportations (NJDOT)
recently revived Adopt-A-Highway volun-
teer clean-up program, developed in con-
junction with the New Jersey Clean
Communities Council (NJCCC). The pro-
gram, which will help improve the envi-
ronment and control trash removal costs,
was established to help keep New Jersey
highways more scenic and litter-free.
Joseph Giordano, Jr., Brian, Nick and
Brad Giordano, of Giordanos Recycling,
announced the company has adopted
Route 55 near Giordanos Recycling
Center in Vineland.
We are thrilled to be a part of this
important effort to keep our roadways
cleaner and more attractive, said Joseph
Giordano, Jr. We commend the New
Jersey Clean Communities Council and
the New Jersey Department of
Transportation for their efforts in reviving
the program, and we know our employees
are glad to lend a helping hand.
As part of the Adopt-A-Highway pro-
gram, Giordanos Recycling will organize
litter pick-ups several times per year.
Employee volunteers, trained by the
NJCCC to safely work on active highways,
will place trash and recyclable bags for
pick-up by Giordanos and the NJDOT
crews. Bags, gloves and safety vests will be
provided by NJCCC and Giordanos
Recycling.
The Adopt-A-Highway program, part
of NJDOTs Clean Up New Jersey initia-
tive, offers businesses and organizations
the ability to participate in the depart-
ments efforts to maintain and spruce-up
roadways throughout the state.
About Giordano's Recycling
Giordanos Reycling, based in Vineland,
New Jersey, is a fourth-generation compa-
ny specializing in the processing of scrap
materials for recycling purposes. Its scrap
{
1
0
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
SOUTH JERSEY LANDSCAPE SUPPLY
1363 S. Delsea Dr. Vineland 856-563-1500
<RXU /DZQ DQG *DUGHQ 2XWOHW
SUMMER
HOURS:
Mon. - Fri 8am - 5:30pm
Sat. 8am - 4pm
Se habla espanol
4 Step Program
5,000 sq. ft.
$
69
99
15,000 sq. ft.
$
179
99
SINCE-
1984
20 lb.
Propane
$15
3.5%
Sales Tax
Pavers and Retaining Walls
'LVFRYHU
7KH 'LIIHUHQFH
TM
Delse
<RXU /D
S
1363 S.
SOUTH JER
*
ineland 856
DZQ DQG *DUGHQ
CA
VVineland 856-563-1500 . ea Dr
S EY LAND S
6-563-1500
Q 2XWOHW
APE SUPP
STIHLdealers.com
All prices NES-SRP. Available at participating dealers while supplies last. 2012 STIHL NES12-442-102061-4
CHAIN SAWS
STARTING AT
$
179
95
BLOWERS
STARTING AT
$
149
95
TRIMMERS
STARTING AT
$
159
95
*Number one selling brand is based on syndicated Irwin Broh Research (commercial landscapers) as well as independent consumer research of 2009-2011 U.S.
sales and market share data for the gasoline-powered handheld outdoor power equipment category combined sales to consumers and commercial landscapers.
FS 45
TRIMMER
$
159
95
BG 55 HANDHELD
BLOWER
$
149
95
Cape May Court House
Rental Country, Inc.
706 Route 9 South
609-465-7368 | RentalCountryCapeMayCourtHouse.com
Egg Harbor Twp
Rental Country, Inc.
6661 Black Horse Pike
609-646-6666 | RentalCountryEggHarborTownship.com
Sicklerville
Rental Country, Inc.
2721 Rt 42
856-227-4242 | RentalCountryInc.com
Vineland
Rental Country, Inc.
1044 W Landis Avenue
856-692-7510 | RentalCountryVineland.com
l a e g d n i t a p i c i t r a t p e a l b a l i a v . A P R S S E s N e c i r l p l A
Cape May Court House
2 0 1 2 4 4 2 1 S E L N H I T 2 S 1 0 . 2 t s a s l e i l p p u e s l i h s w r e
Sicklerville se
4 1 6 0
ville
e r e w o p - e n i l o s a e g h r t o a f t a e d r a h t s e k r a d m n s a e l a s
d e t a c i d n y n s d o e s a s b i d n a r g b n i l l e e s n r o e b m u N *
609-646-6666 | RentalCountryEggHarborT
6661 Black Horse Pike
, Inc. Rental Country
wp Egg Harbor TTwp
609-465-7368 | RentalCountryCapeMayCourtHouse.com
706 Route 9 South
, Inc. Rental Country
a e d L H I ST
d e n i b m o y c r o g e t a t c n e m p i u q r e e w o r p o o d t u d o l e h d n a d h e
n s i l a l e s w ) a s r e p a c s d n a l l a i c r e m m o c h ( c r a e s e h R o r n B i w r I
856-692-7510 | RentalCountryVineland.com
1044 W Landis A
Rental Country
Vineland
856-227-4242 | RentalCountryInc.com
2721 Rt 42
Rental Country
ownship.com ggHarborT Township.com
apeMayCourtHouse.com
om c . s r e l
. s r e p a c s d n a l l a i c r e m m o d c n s a r e m u s n o o c s t e a s
. S . 1 U 1 0 2 - 9 0 0 f 2 h o c r a e s e r r e m u s n o t c n e d n e p e d n
0 | RentalCountryVineland.com
venue dis A
, Inc. try
d
2 | RentalCountryInc.com
, Inc. try
Grown
& Sold
Here
*URZHUV RI TXDOLW\ SODQWV IRU DOO
\RXU JDUGHQLQJ QHHGV
:LGH 9DULHW\ RI 3HUHQQLDOV $QQXDOV
2OG 7LPH )DYRULWHV 1HZ 9DULHWLHV
+DQJLQJ %DVNHWV %HGGLQJ 3ODQWV
)ORZHULQJ 6KUXEV DQG PXFK PRUH
470 N. Union Rd. East Vineland
(between Oak Rd. & Landis Ave.)
856-691-7881
www.cmgrowers.com
Mon. - Sat. 8am-6pm Sun. 9am-5pm
Home
Garden
a
n
d
Grapevine 10-15 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:39 PM Page 10
metal and waste paper recycling facility is
well-equipped to separate, sort and bale
all types of recyclable materials, such as
non-ferrous and ferrous metals, high-
temp alloys, plastics, cardboard and waste
paper and waste hauling, providing trash
removal throughout Southern New Jersey.
Home Arts Displays at
County Fair
The Home Arts Building will provide a
site for local non-professional artisans to
display their talents during the week of
the Cumberland County Fair, says Kurt
Bergen, president of the Cumberland
County Fair Association. This years Fair
at the County Fairgrounds on Carmel
Road in Millville will take place July 2-7,
2012.
According to Bergen, many people have
expressed an interest in entering in enter-
ing exhibits for judging and display.
The Cumberland County Fair
Associations Board of Directors is pleased
to host this popular activity that showcas-
es the creative abilities, hobbies and inter-
ests of county residents.
Home Arts Exhibitors booklets and
entry forms are available at the 4-H
Center located at 291 Morton Avenue in
Rosenhayn (451-2800, ext. 3). Books will
also be available in local libraries. You can
call to request a Home Arts Exhibition
Book from the Fair office at 825-3820 or
the 4-H Center at 451-2800, ext. 3.
Exhibits may be brought to the Fair on
Sunday, July 1, from 12 noon to 4 p.m. All
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
1
1
}
Continued on next page
THOMPSONS
RECYCLING CENTER
WE ALSO CARRY:
Sand Topsoil Stone
Hours: Monday - Friday 8 am - 4:30 pm
1020 Buckshutem Road Bridgeton, NJ 08302 856-455-3828
CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTED
MULCH
BUY BULK & SAVE!
Residential and Commercial Customers Welcome
DELIVERY
AVAILABLE
WE CARRY BAG MULCH
o TTo d n a S
S L A E W
e n o t S l i o s p o
: YY: R R A C O S
3.5%
Sales
Tax
The stone makes all the difference
1969 South East Ave (Between Grant & Elmer Rd.) Vineland, NJ 08360
Call for Details: 856-692-8650 Mon.-Fri. 7-5 Sat. 7-12
Exclusive
Financing
The stone makees all the difference ce
g n i cc n a n i F
x EEx
t e D r o ffo l l a C
t s a E h t u o S 9 6 9 1
o M 0 5 6 8 - 2 9 6 - 6 5 8 : s l i a t
m l E & t n a r G n e e w t e B ( e v AAv
2 1 - 7 . t a S 5 - 7 . i r F - . n o
3 8 0 J NNJ , d n a l e n i V ) . d R r e m 0 6
From left: Joseph Giordano,
Jr., Vineland Mayor Robert
Romano, and Nick, Brian
and Brad Giordano gather
on a stretch of the two-mile
section of Route 55 adopted
by Vineland-based
Giordanos Recycling as
part of NJDOTs Adopt-A-
Highway program to clean
up the states highways.
Giordanos Recycling is one
of the first participants in
the recently-revived pro-
gram, developed in conjunc-
tion with the New Jersey
Clean Communities Council.
Grapevine 10-15 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:39 PM Page 11
{
1
2
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
BIATON SIRVICIS
%,* 08/&+ 6$/(
Quclit Sertices Since :p;; 1o S. EusL. Ave. VIneIund, NJ o86o
{Sg6) 6q6-o1q Iu: Sg6-6q6-11q
HAnowooo MuLcH (LicHT nowNI $22.DD cu. Yo.
Pnzmium HooT MuLcH (DAnK nowNI $2S.DD cu. Yo.
LAcK DYzo MuLcH $2S.DD cu. Yo.
Best Delivery
Prices in
Vineland Area
LAwN MAiNTzNANcz
FzNciNc
SniNKLzn SYsTzms
Soo SzzoiNc PAvzns
Top Soil
Available
GAROPPO
STONE & GARDEN CENTER
IN BUSINESS OVER 38 YEARS!
1200 Harding Highway (Rt. 40), Newfield www.garoppos.com (856) 697-4444
Bring Life To Your Landscape!
Largest Selection of Stone
& Mulch in South Jersey!
We Carry a Full Line of E.P. Henry Products
Riverrock - Various Sizes
Driveway Stone
Screened Top Soil
Mulch - Various Varieties
Homeowners Special!
10% OFF Your EP HENRY PURCHASE!
One coupon per customer. Not valid with other offers
or prior purchases. Excluding Contractors. Exp. 5/31/12
REFILL YOUR PROPANE HERE!
20 lb BBQ Tank
$
16
00
PICK
UP &
DELIVERY
We Have Mushroom Soil
N EN D R A G & E N O T S R E T N E C N
Y
VER
P
LI
EEL
PICK
&
DE
P UUP
I
D
K
Its coming...just in time for Spring 2012
www.sjpumpkinshow.com
Springtime
Home-Garden Expo
COUNTRY CRAFT FESTIVAL
May 19 & 20 10am-5pm at Buena Vista Camping Resort
775 Harding Hwy (Rtes. 40 & 54) Buena, NJ 08310
Vendors & Craftsmen call
856.765.0118
GENERAL ADMISSION FREE
FREE Shopping Bags with Pet Food Donation
r Home & Garden Companies
r Over 100 Craftsmen
r Food, Music, Give-aways
r Wine Tastings
r Landscaping Exhibits
r 1,000s of Products and Services
Springtime
Home-Garden Expo
COUNTRY CRAFT FESTIVAL
Home
Garden
a
n
d
food items are to be dropped off on
Monday July 2 between 12 noon and 2
p.m. Judging begins on Monday afternoon.
All divisions entered are open to non-pro-
fessional men and women.
Divisions include Handwork, Painting
and Drawing, Photography, Crafts,
Woodworking, Baked Goods, Vegetables
and Flowers.
The Home Arts Exhibitors Book lists
all divisions and classes. All classes will be
judged and ribbons awarded. Entry forms
are due by June 15.
For more information, contact Mary
Jane Surface, Home Arts Building
Coordinator at 825-3820 or 455-7634. I
Home & Garden,
Craftsmen Expos
& Fairs
B & K Enterprise of Millville (Kathy
and Beau Wright) have been creating
successful regional events for more
than 10 years. All events are heavily
advertised and thousands turn out for
these shows listed below.
Space is available indoors and out.
Pet friendly, music, food, contests,
exhibits, craftsmen and Home products.
Giveaways, money saving coupons and
picnic style dining.
Heres whats coming up:
THIS WEEKEND: Springtime Home-
Garden & Landscaping Expo AND
Springtime Country Craft Fair
May 19-20 10 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Buena Vista Camping Resort
775 Harding Hwy., Buena, NJ 08310
Sunday Country Craft & Home Fair
May 27 and June 3, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Salem County Fairground
Rt. 40, Pilesgrove/Woodstown, NJ
Gloucester County Craft & Home Fair
June 16, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Rain date June 17
Gloucester County 4-H Fairground,
Rt. 77, Mullica Hill, NJ
Events showcase hundreds of prod-
ucts and services, indoor and outdoor
exhibits, Free admission and parking,
rows and rows of handmade art and
crafts, music, food, shopping and much
more.
Go to www.sjpumpkinshhow.com or
www.springtimehomeexpo.com
Continued from previous page
Grapevine 10-15 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:39 PM Page 12
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
1
3
}
in your familys history with an AtlantiCare provider.
AtlantiCares primary care providers are ready to help you start a healthy new chapter in your life story.
Our practices offer timely appointments, electronic medical records, and a commitment to connecting and
coordinating everyone involved in your care, even when you need to be admitted to the hospital. Choose an
AtlantiCare primary care provider to help take you well into the future.
Philip Whiting, DO
Dawn Gadon, RN, APN-C
(609) 296-4014
459 Route 9 South
* Little Egg Harbor, NJ 08087
Melissa Hutchison, MD
Patrick Eye, APRN-BC
(609) 390-7814
210 South Shore Road, Suite 201
* Marmora, NJ 08223
Stephen Bushay, MD
Marna A. Cutler, DO
(609) 569-1900
802 Tilton Road, Suite 102
Northeld, NJ 08225
Elise M. Rohana, APN
(609) 886-3636
3826 Bayshore Road
North Cape May, NJ 08204
Ronald Gelzunas, MD
Mary Ann Hain, MD
(609) 522-3131
1200 New Jersey Avenue
North Wildwood, NJ 08260
Kevin J. Kearns, MD
(609) 465-2710
9 Broadway
Cape May Court House, NJ 08210
Gregory Novotny, DO
Hector Paradela, MD
Brian Timms, DO
Jennifer Twardzik, DO
(609) 407-2310
2500 English Creek Road
Bldg 900, Suite 907
Egg Harbor Township, NJ 08234
Mitchell Kaminski, MD
Donna Pherribo, DO
Anthony Salvo, MD
(609) 561-4211
120 South White Horse Pike
* Hammonton, NJ 08037
Anila Amin, MD
(609) 927-7070
222 New Road, Unit 101
Central Park East
Linwood, NJ 08221
Jason Chew, DO
(609) 391-7500
201 West Avenue
* Ocean City, NJ 08226
Jon Slotoroff, DO
Christine Ablett, APN
(609) 641-1077
48 Ansley Blvd.
Pleasantville, NJ 08232
Thomas Armbruster, MD
(609) 926-2560
235 Shore Road, Suite C
Somers Point, NJ 08244
Robert L. Lipshutz, DO
Leslie S. Rosenthal, MD
(609) 441-2199
7313 Ventnor Avenue
* Ventnor, NJ 08406
Richard A Renza, DO
Jolene R. Ganiel, APN
B. Denise Hemby, APN
Jaqueline M. Russell, APN
(609) 523-1331
6410 New Jersey Avenue
Wildwood Crest, NJ 08260

1-888-569-1000
AtlantiCarePhysicianGroup.net
* An NCQA Recognized Practice
Physician Group
Primary Care Plus
Master Gardener
Training
Rutgers Cooperative Extension
Cumberland County Master
Gardeners training/accreditation
courses are held weekly until the
end of May. Each three-hour
course is open to the public for a
fee of $20, which includes inten-
sive topic training, handouts, and
refreshments.
The remaining course: May 22,
2012Propagation
The class runs from 9 a.m until
12 noon and is held at Rutgers
Cooperative Extension Education
Center, 291 Morton Ave.,
Rosenhayn. For further information
or to register for a session, call
451-2800, ext. 4.
The Rutgers Master Gardeners
Organization is a volunteer organi-
zation whose members receive
specialized training so they can
educate and advise the public on
horticultural issues. Members also
spend hundreds of hours each year
beautifying Cumberland and Salem
counties.
Some of the groups landscaping
projects include the Veterans
Home in Vineland, Ranch Hope in
Alloway, Malaga Campground in
Malaga, WheatonArts in Millville,
Boys Club and Girls Club in
Vineland, Habitat for Humanity and
AHome homes in various locations
together with several community
gardens.
The Master Gardeners recently
began the establishment of a rain
garden at the Rutgers Cooperative
Extension property in Millville,
which will serve as a continuous
learning experience for the public
about the importance of proper
storm water management.
For a no-obligation
advertising consultation,
call 856-457-7815 or e-mail:
sales@grapevinenewspaper.com today.
Advertise in
The
Grapevine
and get
incredible
results.
Grapevine 10-15 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:39 PM Page 13
{
1
4
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
854 WEYMOUTH ROAD VINELAND, NJ
856-697-8101
Its Where You Want It
CALLING ALL CONTRACTORS
No Garage, No Problem
Storage Units to Accomodate, Plumbers,
Electricians, Painters, Tile Setters etc
Keep Your Supplies Safe
@ Weymouth Storage
SUMMER CAMP PROGRAM AT
U.S. MARTIAL ARTS ACADEMY
U.S. Martial Arts Family Fitness Center has been serving our community for the past eighteen years.
We have taken pride in being a place that caters to the needs of the families of this community.
Children will need a fun, safe environment to spend their time. So why not give us a try?
Please ask about our Child Care Budget Plans!
20/40 In Ground
Swimming Pool
Lazy River Splash Park
Soccer
Basketball
Football
Various Indoor &
Outdoor Games
Skateboarding
3430 Oak Road, Vineland, NJ 08361
856-794-8877
For more information about U.S. Martial Arts
Academy, visit www.usmartialarts.biz
U.S. MARTIAL ARTS ACADEMY FAMILY FITNESS CENTER
AND MUCH MORE!!!
FEATURES:
*Early
Registration
Save $5 a Day
*Early registration is by May 31st.
For a no-obligation
advertising consultation,
call 856-457-7815 or e-mail:
sales@grapevinenewspaper.com today.
Advertise in
The
Grapevine
The
Grapevine
and get
incredible
results.
childhood obesity and Type 2 diabetes
cases has soared. Researchers discovered
that the disease progresses more rapidly
in youngsters than in adults, complicating
their treatment programs.
Cumberland County holds the dubious
distinction of ranking #1 in poverty and
obesity in New Jersey. Studies of the
region concluded that limited nutritional
food options and dietary education enable
unhealthy eating habits.
After studying Vinelands household
demographics, the Rutgers Center for
State Health Policy (CSHP) determined
the homes with the most children and
lowest incomes had the least access to
supermarkets. It also ranked supermar-
kets as providing the healthiest options;
next were smaller groceries; convenience
stores and restaurants sell the least nutri-
tional products.
School and the home community must
unite to help develop lifelong healthy
eating habits. To confront this health
threat, Vineland has instituted two new
programs.
According to Vineland Health
Education-Field Representative Ryan
Long, The health departments newest
initiative, Champions for Health is invit-
ing doctors and/or diabetes providers to
assist Hispanic patients from Cumberland,
Salem and Atlantic counties who are dia-
betic, pre-diabetic and/or tobacco users.
They will help patients needing extra
assistance in self-managing their disease.
Community health workers will provide
six months of follow-up, promoting diet,
exercise and resource referrals.
Lisa Scheetz, COO of the Cumberland
Cape Atlantic YMCA and co-chair of
Vinelands New Jersey Partnership for
Healthy Kids, describes the Healthy in a
Hurry campaign. Funded by the
Princeton-based Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation (RWJF), the City of Vineland
and the YMCA are working together.
Nutrition professionals will visit small
groceries and bodegas, urging them to
stock healthier food items. Our goal is to
help them become WIC certified. We are
using a tool kit designed to help small
stores provide some healthy food options,
she says.
The RWJF, the largest philanthropic
organization devoted solely to public
health in the U.S., continues the work of
its namesake. The RWJF mission is to
address and improve those dominant
public health care issues that negatively
impact the public. During the 20th cen-
tury, Johnsons family business, Johnson
& Johnson, became a world-renowned
health and medical care products
company.
Local officials recognize this nutrition-
al emergency. Thanks to a Super Walmart
and the 30,000-square-foot Landis
MarketPlace, which opened in May 2011,
the Vineland shopping experience is
changing. Exceeding customer expecta-
tions, the MarketPlace daily visitor counts
totaled 1,600 in March400 more than
estimated.
The RWJF also sponsors the New
Jersey Food Access Initiative, which is
managed by The Reinvestment Fund. The
Fund has partnered with developers to
open stores in desert neighborhoods
with too many fast food outlets, but a
scarcity of large supermarkets. It lends $2
million to $3 million per project, with the
remainder privately financed.
The Fund selected the Bottino familys
B&B Properties of Vineland LLC, owner
of multiple regional ShopRites, as its local
partner in Vineland. As part of the initia-
tive, the Vineland Planning Board
approved B&Bs new ShopRite supermar-
ket. Vineland Mayor Robert Romano has
long advocated for the project, which aims
to rejuvenate western Landis Avenue.
Long supports each of these new food
outlets, calling them proactive steps
towards healthy diets. He says, We hope
greater shopping opportunities will
expedite access to fresh foods and com-
petitive pricing.
Developers must meet specific traffic
issue criteria, but the ShopRite is sched-
uled for a June groundbreaking and a
2013 opening. The project will be built
on the city-owned 15-acre parcel that
was the former site of the U-Pull-It auto
salvage yard.
Across from the Super Walmart, the
$25 million, 86,942-square foot supermar-
ket calls for a 1,280-square-foot vestibule
and 459 parking spaces. The nearby cur-
rent 58,000-square-foot ShopRite employs
130; the new store will employ almost 200.
The additional floor space will incor-
porate a specialty food service area,
Chinese buffet and larger health screen-
ing area. Customers will enjoy increased
product selections, plus expanded
departments.
A liquor store section is a requirement
for B&B Properties to remain involved.
The company insists on their approval for
a liquor license before going forward with
the construction.
Based on Vinelands population, a
New Jersey statute authorizes two liquor
licenses within the citys borders.
Council already approved a redevelop-
ment agreement, mandating that
Vineland create a new liquor license.
Upon its introduction, B&B must still
make the highest bid for it. There is a
$350,000 floor for bids on the license.
Representatives from B&B Properties
of Vineland LLC declined to comment for
this story. I
Continued from cover
Healthy
Grapevine 10-15 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:39 PM Page 14
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
1
5
}
ATLANTICARE PHYSICIAN GROUP CARDIOLOGY
HAMMONTON
WELCOMES VIREN VANKAWALA, MD, FACC
219 North White Horse Pike, Suite 101, Hammonton, NJ 08037
www.atlanticarephysiciangroup.net 1-888-569-1000
Dr. Viren Vankawala is the Vice Chairman of Cardiovascular Division
and the Director of the Non-Invasive Cardiology Laboratory at AtlantiCare
Regional Medical Center. He is board certified in cardiovascular
disease, internal medicine, echocardiography, nuclear cardiology, and
cardiac CT with a special certification in pacing and defibrillation from
the International Board of Heart Rhythm Examiners.
Dr. Vankawala completed his internship and residency in internal
medicine at Albert Einstein College of Medicine in Bronx, New York.
He completed a Fellowship in Cardiovascular Disease at the University
of Connecticut, Farmington, Connecticut.
His expertise is in clinical consultation; echocardiography, including
3D and transesophageal; nuclear cardiology; diagnostic cardiac
catheterization; and pacemaker insertion.
Most major insurance plans are accepted
Wednesday andFriday: 12:30 p.m. 4:30 p.m.
Viren Vankawala, MD, FACC
Combining cutting-edge
medical technology
with compassionate
care should be every
physician's goal.
This is what I strive
for every day.
Now accepting new
patients. To schedule
an appointment, please
call 1-888-569-1000.
News in Brief
I
New Technology at Eye
Associates/SurgiCenter
Optiwave Refractive Analysis (ORA)
is a revolutionary new option used dur-
ing cataract procedure to optimize post-
operative visual outcomes and is now at
Eye Associates/SurgiCenter of Vineland.
ORA provides an on-demand analysis of
the eye, not possible with todays conven-
tional measurements and instruments. At
any point in the cataract procedure, Dr.
Tyson or Dr. Holzinger can easily take a
measurement, which is then analyzed
and used to guide their decision making
to optimize the vision of your eye.
ORA works by directing a beam of low
intensity laser light into the eye during
the surgical procedure. The laser light
reflects off the back of your eye, and sen-
sors in the ORA device analyze the
reflected wave of light exiting your eye.
This real-time analysis measures all of the
eyes unique optical characteristics, and
gives the surgeon an accurate measure-
ment of your eyes focusing capabilities.
Prior to ORA, surgeons have been
unable to assess the quality of vision dur-
ing the procedure, and would have to
wait until weeks after the procedure to
determine the accuracy of the results.
Whether youve had LASIK or have
astigmatism or any other visual error,
ORA can help you potentially eliminate
your need for eyeglasses after your
cataract procedure.
Contact any of the Eye Associates
offices with questions. Eye Associates
has offices in Vineland 856-691-8188,
Cherry Hill 856-428-5797, Blackwood
856-227-6262, Hammonton 609-567-2355
and Mays Landing 609-909-0700 or 1-
800-922-1766.
Brides and Grooms: A Winter
White Wedding Windfall
For brides and grooms who want to
combine the romance of a dream wed-
ding with the practicality of a realistic
budget, The Carriage House offers the
perfect solution. The award-winning
wedding venues Winter White Wedding
Windfall promotion offers discounts as
high as 15 percent for weddings booked
by June 30, 2012, and held in January,
February or March of 2013.
In addition, the promotion offers cou-
ples the chance to win free reception
enhancements, including the Grand
Prize, a Deluxe Cascading Chocolate
Fountain; Second Prize, a SMores
Station; Third Prize, a Create-Your-Own-
Cupcake Bar; and Fourth Prize, a Martini
Ice Luge.
We designed this promotion to show
brides and grooms that the wedding of
their dreams is definitely within their
reach, said Kristin Steelman, Director of
Sales for The Carriage House.
The Carriage House, located at 25
South Pitney Road in Galloway, has
received The Knots Best of Weddings
2012 award, as well as the WeddingWire
Networks 2012 Brides Choice Award for
Ceremony and Reception Venue. From
Nantucket Clambake and Tapas stations
to Ice Cream and Gelato bars to Lightup
Table packages, the stately venue offers a
wide variety of unique and elegant menu
items and enhancements.
We chose these particular prizes to
show couples a few of our most popular
new enhancements, explained Steelman.
These are just a handful of the fun, cre-
ative, and memorable items that weve
added to our wedding menus.
To be eligible for the Winter White
Wedding Windfall discount and contest,
couples must book a wedding at The
Carriage House by June 30, 2012, and the
wedding must take place in January,
February or March of 2013. The Winter
White Wedding discount can be as high
as 15 percent, based on the wedding date
and reception package. To receive more
information, to tour The Carriage House,
or to enter the Winter White Wedding
Windfall contest by booking a wedding,
call (609) 748-2400, or e-mail
sales@the-carriagehouse.com. I
Grapevine 10-15 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:39 PM Page 15
{
1
6
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
1853 Vine Rd. Vineland
691-4848
Fax: 856-691-2294
marcaccimeats@verizon.net
8PECAL8
May 16 - May 19
Hours: Mon-8at. 7am-6pm
EBT
$

49
OE
$
Z
99
OE
$
1
9
OE
$
Z
49
OE
8ll)
8011l8
$1lk$
l80 001
F08k
080F$
$
1
9
OE
0l81l8 001
F08k
080F$
$
Z
19
OE
808lll$$ F08k
$800l0l8
8011$
808ll8
8l8lfl
I$1lk 08 80$1l
008 0N8 6Nll1 08 807
l1ll8
$0$6l
$
.9OE
f8l$8
080N
$1l0k$
I40 l8. 0$l $J0l 08
Spring has nally sprung!!
So spring on in here and see our great selections of quality meats and
our great low prices. Whatever you need, we will be sure to have it!
It will be a three-day extravaganza on Landis Avenue
Pig Roast t Seafood Boil t Homemade Ice Cream t
t Tacos t Free Samples t Amazing Specials Inside
Over $2,000 in Giveaways
*
Family Fun Day
Sat. June 2, 10 am - 3 pm
Live Music w/ Towheads &
Rich Favretto Bluegrass Band
Kids Activities
balloon animals,
face painting,
tattoos & surprises!
At Vineland, NJ
Amish Market
t
Downtown Vineland 631 E Landis Ave 8562136002
LandisMarketPlace.com
for Coupons & Specials
Come Join Us as
We Celebrate Our
1 Year Anniversary
May, 31, June 1 and 2 (Thurs. thru Sat.)
ome Join Us CCome Join Us as s as
, 31, June 1 a Mayy, 31, June 1 a
ear Anniv 1 Y Year Anniv
t elebra e C W
a . thru S urs Th nd 2 ( a
y ersar v
ur e O t
i l I id S
t eam r e C ade Ic
enue v Landis A
Amish Market
At Vineland, NJ
.) t a
tivities c A
ass Band r o Blueg
wheads & o TTo w/
, 10 am - 3 pm
y un Da F
s y a w ea v
ecials Inside ng Sp
ises! oos & sur tt
, ting e pain c
, on animals
pr
Gabriels Horn { BY FRANK GABRIEL }
I
A Real Italian
Market
Guiseppes Italian Market in Buena is a dream come
true for owner John Frandinoand it shows.
P
ulling into the new Guiseppes
Italian Market at half past eight
on a bright, sunny mid-May
morning, we quickly came to
understand why owner/operator John
Frandino encouraged us to arrive early in
order for him to be able to accommodate a
brief interview.
For those who have not yet visited, or
seen the facility, its a nearly 10,000-
square-foot, traditional-style market and
delicatessen.
Located on Route 40 in Buena, just
west of the Weymouth Road intersection,
Guiseppes is named in honor of
Frandinos father.
The building itself is cavernous, with
pretty interior walls of bleached wood.
An array of plants lines the front, beck-
oning with their spring color and scent.
Once within, rows of fresh produce on
the right immediately impact both the
visual and olfactory senses.
Specifically, just-picked, ruby-red
strawberries, hand delivered by a grower
from just down the road in neighboring
Newfield. Still wet with that mornings
dew, it would literally be impossible to
find a fresher berry anywhere on the face
of the planet.
To the left, an astonishing array of
Italian specialty productsmore in a
momentfill up much of the store.
The back wall contains a lengthy deli
counter and prepared food area, featuring
Boars Head meats and cheeses. Alongside
sits a colorful olive bar.
Frandino, a mason by trade, tells us
that he chose this new enterprise for dual
reasons.
The masonry businesses bottom fell
out, and I always wanted to own one.
Guiseppes opening, on the first day of
May, represented the culmination of a two-
year planning and construction process.
Weve been watching the place slowly
sprout up from vacant space next to the
Big Apple Diner for six months or so,
wondering what it would look like once
completed.
The results are striking and appear
well-received by the local populace.
Just as Frandino predicted, once doors
opened at 9, customers appeared.
Employees scurried about busily, too,
prepping for the day.
Interiors, impeccably clean, are nicely
organized with plenty of space and an
open floor design, well-suited to provide
the traffic flow that retailers cherish so
dearly.
Wonderful scents emanate throughout,
from bins of Liscios bread and rolls to the
goods created in Guiseppes own kitchen.
Unique, imported gourmet treats are to
be found in great abundance as well. Like
pasta from Bari, Italy producer Riscossa
and sauces featuring authentic San
Grapevine 16-21 050912-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:47 PM Page 16
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
1
7
}
Frank Hartman, Class Productions Ltd., Inc.
S
inging
the
A
merican
Songbook
...and bringing back that special
feel to the local entertainment industry
NEXT PERFORMANCE: Dinner Show at Neptune Restaurant at 5pm on May 20.
To book Frank for your local restaurant,
nightclub or special event, Call 856-459-2185 nightclub or special ev
rank for y F o book T
all 856-459-2185 C vent,
your local restaurant,
Marzano tomatoes, considered to be
among the world's finest.
Various olive oils, vinegars, pignoli (pine)
nuts, roasted or pickled vegetables and
fish are collected on a display to the deli
counters left. An antipasto fantasyland.
A freezer section offers filled pastas by
local favorites Marie Poggi and Gardellas,
along with Guiseppes proprietary meat
sauce and meatballs.
Risotto fans will be pleased to know
that they carry not only standard short-
grain Arborio, but also a relatively rare
rice, Vialone Nano Extra from the Veneto
region of northern Italy.
Its a secret ingredient, beloved most
notably by Iron Chefand Rutgers alumni
Mario Batali.
Naturally, where theres pasta there
must be cheese, and their selection
doesnt disappoint.
A separate station devoted to those
products is loaded with, among others, pro-
volone, asiago, herbed goat and goat feta,
ricotta salata, Grana Padano, gorgonzola
and of course, Parmigiano Reggiano.
More out-of-the-ordinary stuff, like
whole, flowery bunches of oregano,
bagged Umbrian lentils and blood orange
Pellegrino soda is also to be found.
Wandering the aisles, it becomes
apparent that as much attention to detail
was paid to the inventory lines as was to
the construct itself.
We see the place becoming a facile,
one-stop shop for summertime shore-
bound travelers.
Especially so the vast, 30-odd collec-
tion of cold deli salads, all fashioned with-
out preservatives.
These stretch from the obligatoryegg,
tuna, chicken, potato and slawto the
atypicalpulpo (octopus) artichoke, beet
and Italian roasted vegetable.
Frandinos other key personnel include
wife and partner, Margie, cook Lou
Cucinotta, Deli Manager Nick Hartman
and Floor Manager Bill Beattie.
Frandino himself seems to possess the
requisite people skills for a successful
food vendor.
We observed as he interacted with
early-a.m. deli orders, personalizing cus-
tomers experiences.
Engaging and enthusiastic, he seems to
genuinely enjoy this new line of work.
Not bad for a guy who spent most of
his career laying concrete. I
Guiseppes Italian Market, 528 N. Harding
Highway, Buena, NJ, 856-213-6391. Open
Tuesday through Saturday 9 a.m.7 p.m.,
Sunday 9 a.m.4 p.m. (Closed Monday),
www.GuiseppesMarket.com.
Grapevine 16-21 050912-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:47 PM Page 17
{
1
8
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
603 Landis Ave - 856-794-8653
MainStreetVineland.org
L
LANDIS
May 16 thru 22
$
8L Specis
LUNCH ON LANDIS
MENUS
San Blas Restaurant
13 Northeast Blvd
Choice of one entre:
- Three steak tacos and a sllce of
Tres Leches cake
- 8lstek Almexlcana (steak,
onlons, green peppers,
tomatoes, rlce and beans)
- Camarones al Mo[o (shrlmp wlth
garllc, salad, rlce and beans)
l small soft drlnk
Lucianos FreshMarket
Landls MarketPlace- Upper Level
63l L Landls
Cholce of one meal:
- Catsh Platter wlth sweet potato
frles and cole slaw
- Gumbo and Munuletta
sandwlch
- 8lackened Salmon on organlc
eld greens
l homemade brownle
l small sweet tea
Sunnyside Kitchenette
Landls MarketPlace- Lower Level
63l L Landls
Choice of one entre:
- Cheesesteak wlth lettuce,
tomatoes, onlons and sauce,
and French fries
- Grllled cheese and tomato
sandwlch, wlth chlps and a cup
of soup
l small drlnk
Cholce of apple ple or red velvet
cake for dessert
Steves BBQ
Landls MarketPlace- Lower Level
63l L Landls
Choice of one entre:
- 2-plece frled chlcken meal wlth
two sldes and a dlnner roll
- rotlsserle chlcken meal wlth
two sldes and a dlnner roll
l small drlnk
Las Lomas Mexican Grille
Landls MarketPlace- Upper Level
63l L Landls
Choice of one entre:
- Chlcken tostadas
- Lnchlladas platter
l small drlnk
Moris Restaurant
830 L Landls
- Any ltem on the lunch menu
l small drlnk
Sweet Life Bakery
60l L Landls Ave
- Grllled Cheese (dlnerent klnds
wlll be avallable) and a cup of
soup
Chlps and a plckle
1 iced tea
ANDIS UNCH ON L L
L
DIS

eches cake es L r T
os and eak tac ee st hr T -
e: tr e of one en Choic
d theast Blv 13 Nor
an an Blas Restaur S
MENUS
ANDIS UNCH ON L L
s BB s BBQ e v e t S
e of a sllc
t
DIS
BQ
ar eshM r s F s F uciano L
lnk t dr l small soft
e and b lc , r , salad llc gar
o[o (sh ones al M amar C -
e and bea lc , r oes t oma t
een peppers r , g onlons
e xlcana (st lme ek A 8lst -
ln l small dr
o sldes w t
otlsser r -
o sldes w t
l e fr 2-plec -
e of on Choic
63l L Landls
k ar Landls M
et k r
beans)
lmp wlth hr
ans)
, s
, eak
k
oll and a dlnner r
le chlcken meal wlth
oll and a dlnner r
ed chlcken meal wlth
e: tr ne en
s
el ev er L w o - L e lac ketP
sandwlch
unule Gumbo and M -
w ole sla les and c fr
er wlth sw tt la tsh P a C -
e of one meal: Cholc
63l L Landls
- Up e lac ketP ar Landls M
ar eshM r s F uciano L
Lnchllada -
o Chlcken t -
e of on Choic
63l L Landls
k ar Landls M
oma as L L
ln l small dr
etta
o t eet pota w
el ev pper L
et k r
er tt s pla
ostadas
e: tr ne en
s
el ev - Upper L e lac ketP
rille an G xic e s M
k
63l L L dl
w o - L e lac ketP ar Landls M
chene side Kit y Sunn
ea eet t l small sw
wnle o l homemade br
eens r eld g
almon on 8lackened S -
ln l small dr
em o y lt n A -
830 L Landls
s Res s Restaur ori M
ln l small dr
Lnchllada -
el ev er L w
e ett
ganlc or
k
on the lunch menu
s
t an staur
k
er tt s pla
of soup
sandwlch, wlth chlps a
om llled cheese and t Gr -
ies ench fr r and F
, onlons and oes t oma t
eak wlth lettu Cheesest -
e: tr e of one en Choic
63l L Landls
ea ed t 1 ic
Chlps and a
soup
a v wlll be a
llled Ch Gr -
60l L Landls
e eet Lif w S
and a cup
o t ma
, e sauc
, e uc
le plck
allable) and a cup of
lnds t k en er eese (dlnne
e v s A
y er ak e B
t or desser cake ffo
e e of apple ple or r Cholc
lnk l small dr
ain M
603 Lan
ea ed t 1 ic
et elv ed v
g .or ineland eetV tr S
e - 856-794-8653 v ndis A
Our Lady of the Blessed Sacrament Parish
CHICKEN
BAR-B-Q
SUNDAY, JUNE 10, 2012
11:00 AM UNTIL 5:00 PM
At the Grove Next to
Saint Michaels Church
504 S. West Ave. Minotola, NJ
Tickets are available after masses and at the Parish
office from Monday thru Friday 9:00 am until 4:00 pm
or Call (856) 213-6259 or (856) 697-5226
Tickets are $10.00 Barbeque platter includes: 1/2 chicken,
corn on the cob, fried peppers, tomato basil pasta salad,
roll w/butter & dessert. Also available: Sausage & Peppers
sandwiches, hot dogs, french fries, funnel cakes, home-made
desserts, soda, beer & coffee!
Featuring: Nostalgia Nights Car Show, Chinese Auction,
50/50 Raffle, Dunk Tank, Crafters and DJ Bob Morgan
3,==$ -2(6
1370 North Main Rd. (Between Oak & Wheat), Vineland
691-4411 www.pizzajoesnj.com
ONLY
$
6
99
BUTTERFLY SHRIMP
or CHICKEN
FINGER PLATTER
Includes French Fries, Coleslaw, & Pickles
Exp. 05/31/2012 Normally $8.99
G
reetings! A healthy breakfast is an
absolute must. Studies have shown
that children who do not have
breakfast suffer problems at school such
as headache, sleepiness, lethargy, irritabil-
ity, stomach pain, muscle fatigue, and loss
of focus. These symptoms can hinder the
learning process of students. Adults can
suffer the same symptoms, if they go too
long without food. Doing so on a regular
basis causes the body to begin breaking
down muscle for energy.
A healthy breakfast made of whole
grains, fresh fruit, and proteinwith
things like like yogurt, eggs and peanut
butteris the kick start that our bodies
need to keep us focused on our daily tasks,
help our concentration, and give us energy.
Here are two recipes sure to help you start
your day the healthy way!
Fruity Breakfast Sundae
6 oz. plain Greek-style yogurt
Honey, maple syrup or blue agave,
to taste
1/4 cup fresh blueberries
1/4 cup fresh sliced strawberries
1/4 cup granola (see recipe below)
In a small bowl, add yogurt, then stir
in sweetener of choice, top with blueber-
ries, strawberries and granola. Serve.
Easy & Delicious Baked
Granola
3 cups rolled oats
1 tbs. wheat germ
1 tbs. flaxseed meal
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
3/4 cup chopped walnuts, pecans or
almonds
1/4 cup honey
1/2 cup maple syrup or blue agave
1/4 cup safflower or sunflower oil
1 tsp. pure vanilla extract
3/4 cup raisins, dried cranberries or
dried cherries
Preheat oven to 325. In a large bowl,
combine oats, wheat germ, flaxseed meal,
cinnamon, nuts, honey, maple syrup, oil,
and vanilla. Mix ingredients until well
combined. Spread granola onto a large
baking pan greased with non-stick cook-
ing spray. Bake for 25-35 minutes, stir the
granola occasionally during the baking
process. Remove granola from oven once
done, and stir in the dry fruit. Let granola
cool completely before storing in airtight
containers in the refrigerator. Serve with
rice, milk, almond milk or organic milk, or
use as a topping on yogurt, etc.
Note: You will notice that the granola
may still be sticky when it comes out of the
oven but it will crisp and dry up as it cools.
As always, from my kitchen to yours,
Bon Appetit! I
Lisa Ann is author of Seasoned With Love,
Treasured Recipes and Lisa Anns Seasoned
With Love II. Send recipes for publication to
lapd1991@aol.com or The Grapevine, 907 N.
Main Rd., Vineland, NJ 08360.
Day Starters
Nothing gets your day started like a
healthy and nutritious breakfast.
I
Recipe Corner { LISA ANN DiNUNZIO }
Grapevine 16-21 050912-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:47 PM Page 18
Andrea Trattoria, 1833 Harding Hwy.,
Newfield, 697-8400. Italian specialties in
atmosphere of fine dining.
Annata Wine Bar, 216 Bellevue Ave,
Hammonton, 609-704-9797. Food served
tapas style, catering, private parties.
Extensive wine list. Live music Thurs. night.
Babe's Village Inn, Martinelli Avenue,
Minotola, NJ 856-697-1727. Famous crabs,
seafood, Italian cuisine. Eat in or Take out.
Bagel University, 1406 S. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 691-0909. Breakfast and lunch
spot offering sandwiches named for col-
leges near and far.
Barberas Chocolates on Occasion, 782 S.
Brewster Rd., Vineland, 690-9998.
Homemade chocolates and candies,
custom gift baskets.
Bennigans Restaurant, 2196 W. Landis
Ave., Vineland, 205-0010. Entrees,
desserts, drink specials. Take-out. Happy
Hour Mon-Fri 3pm7pm, Sun-Thu 10pmcl.
All Sports packages available.
Big Apple, 528 N. Harding Hwy., Vineland,
697-5500. Steaks, veal, chicken dishes.
Meet friends at bar. Daily lunch and dinner.
Big Johns Pizza Queen, 1383 S. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 205-0012. Featuring Gutbuster
a 21-oz. burger, pizza, wings, subs, dinners.
Bombay Bites, 112 W. Chestnut Ave.,
Vineland, 696-0036. Indian cuisine. $8.95
lunch buffet ($5.99 on Mondays).
Bruni's Pizzeria. 2184 N. 2nd St., Millville
825-2200. Award-winning pizza since 1956.
Open daily at 11 a.m.
Bruno's Family Restaurant, Cape May Ave.
and Tuckahoe Rd., Dorothy, 609-476-4739.
Breakfast, lunch, dinner, pizza. Open Mon-
Sat. 7 a.m.8:30 p.m.
Chows Garden 1101 N. 2nd St., Millville,
327-3259. Sushi Bar, All-you-can-eat buffet.
Cosmopolitan Restaurant Lounge, Bakery,
3513 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland, 765-5977. Happy
hour everyday 11 a.m.6 p.m. half-priced
appetizers, and reduced drink specials.
Crust N Krumbs Bakery, Main & Magnolia
rds., 690-1200. Cakes, pies, cookies,
breads, doughnuts, custom wedding cakes.
Dakota Prime Steakhouse & Sushi Bar at
Ramada, W. Landis Ave. and Rt. 55,
Vineland, 692-8600. The stylish atmos-
phere is perfect for an upscale lunch or
dinner. Steaks, seafood and sushi are deli-
cious. Closed Monday for dinner.
Deeks Deli & Kustard Kitchen, 1370 S.
Main Rd., Vineland, 691-5438. Call for lunch
and dinner specials. Soft ice cream and
cakes year-round. Mon.-Sat 9 a.m.8 p.m.
Dennys, 1001 W. Landis Ave., Vineland,
696-1900. Breakfast, lunch, dinner. Take-
out, too. Happy Hour Mon.-Fri. 37 p.m.
Open 24 hours. Kids eat free Tues. & Sat.
Double Eagle Saloon, 1477 Panther Rd.,
Vineland, 213-6176. Open for lunch and
dinner. Traditional tavern fair.
Elmer Diner, 41 Chestnut St., Elmer. 358-
3600. Diverse menu of large
portions at reasonable prices.
Esposito's Maplewood III, 200 N. Delsea
Dr., Vineland, 692-2011. Steaks, seafood
and pasta dishes at this Italian restaurant.
Erics, 98 S. West Ave., Vineland, 205-
9800. Greek and American cuisine, pizza.
Five Points Inn, E. Landis Ave. and Tuckahoe
Rd., Vineland, 691-6080. Italian cuisine and
dinner buffets to savor. Family-owned.
Ginas Ristorante, Landis and Lincoln Aves.
in ShopRite Plaza, Vineland. Serving dinner
Tues.-Thurs., 4-9 p.m.; Friday & Sat., 4-10
p.m.; Sun., 12-5 p.m. 205-0049.
Golden Palace Diner Restaurant 2623 S
Delsea Dr, Vineland, 692-5424. Serving
breakfast, lunch and dinner daily.
The Greenview Inn at Eastlyn Golf Course,
4049 Italia Avenue, Vineland, 691-5558.
The golfers lounge and bar serves lunch
and snacks daily from 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
The Greenview Inn is a fine dining restau-
rant open for dinner Wed.-Sun. at 5 p.m.
Harrys Pub at Ramada, W. Landis Ave.
and Rt. 55, Vineland, 696-8600. Enjoy
lunch & dinner 7 days a week. Happy hour
daily 46pm with half-price appetizers. Live
entertainment Wed. through Sat.
High Street Chinese Buffet, High St.,
Millville, 825-2288. All-you-can-eat buffet.
Jersey Jerry's. 1362 S. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland, 362-5978. Serving subs, sand-
wiches, and take-out platters.
Larry's II Restaurant, 907 N. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 692-9001. Three meals daily.
Sunday breakfast buffet, early-bird dinners.
La Locanda Pizzeria & Ristorante, 1406 S.
Main Rd., Vineland, 794-3332. Pasta, veal,
chicken. Lunch and dinner. Closed Sun.
Marcianos Restaurant, 947 N. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland, 563-0030. Italian-American cui-
sine, seafood and veal. Open daily for lunch
and dinner, Sunday breakfast buffet.
Martinos Trattoria & Pizzeria, 2614 E.
Chestnut Ave., Vineland, 692-4448. Brick
oven pizza, risotto, polenta. Three meals daily.
Merighi's Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave. and
Union Rd., Vineland, 691-8051.
Banquet/wedding facility and intimate
restaurant. Outdoor dining in the adjacent
Lunas Outdoor Bar & Grille.
Millville Queen Diner, 109 E. Broad Street,
Millville. 327-0900. Open 7 Days/24 Hours.
Moris, E. Landis Ave., Vineland. 690-0300.
Adjacent to the Landis Theater Performing
Arts Center. Includes a casual, upscale
restaurant with a banquet facility and
lounge on site. Lunch and dinner.
Neptune Restaurant and Cocktail Lounge,
1554 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland, 692-2800. Live
lobsters, seafood, prime rib, steak, cocktails.
Old Oar House Irish Pub, 123 N. High
Street Millville, 293-1200. New menu,
kitchen open until 1 a.m. Smoker friendly
outdoor beer garden.
Olympia Restaurant, 739 S. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland, 691-6095. Authentic Greek cui-
sinelamb dishes and salads.
Pegasus, Rts. 40 and 47, Vineland, 694-
0500. Breakfast, lunch, dinner specials;
convenient drive-thru, mini-meal specials.
Speedway Cafe at Ramada, W. Landis Ave.
and Rt. 55, Vineland, 692-8600. Open daily
6 a.m.11 p.m. Breakfast served all day.
Daily specials Mon.Fri. Over 30 dinner
selections at 2 for $19.99 and also 7 for $7
available 7 days a week starting at 3 pm.
Sweet Life Bakery, 601 E. Landis Ave.,
Vineland, 692-5353. Neighborhood bakery.
Homemade pastries, cakes, coffee.
Ten22 Bar & Grill at Centerton Country
Club, 1022 Almond Rd., Pittsgrove, 358-
3325. Lunch and dinner. New tavern menu
features soups, salads, burgers, sandwich-
es, wraps and entree selections. Sunday
Brunch extravaganza.
Uncle Rickys Outdoor Bar, 470 E. Wheat
Rd., Vineland, 691-4454. Ribs, chicken, fish,
steaks. Always clams, eat in or take out.
Dungeness Crab All You Can Eat.
Villa Fazzolari, 821 Harding Hwy., Buena
Vista, 697-7107. Dinner combos, grilled
meats, fish. Lunch and dinner daily.
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
1
9
}
830 E. Landis Ave. | Vineland, NJ 08360 | 856-690-0300
Come and see our exciting
new menu and entertainment

ITALIAN STYLE TAPAS MENU SERVICE
UPCOMING ENTERTAINMENT
THURSDAY
5/17/12: Juicy
FRIDAY
5/18/12: Bar Fly
SATURDAY
5/19/12: Jagged
www. mori sonl andi s. net
DINING OUT
From fine dining to lunch spots to bakeries,
the area has choices to satisfy any appetite.
Call for hours.
Grapevine 16-21 050912-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:47 PM Page 19
{
2
0
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
*Previous purchases excluded. Non transferable and can not be combined with other offers. No cash value. Offer valid with new professionally installed outdoor
system with Invisible Fence of the Jersey Shore. Certain restrictions may apply. 2012 Invisible Fence of the Jersey Shore. 2012 Invisible Fence, Inc. Invisible
Fence is a registered trademark of Invisible Fence, Inc. All rights reserved.
Most trusted brand since 1973
Affordable solutions-indoors & out
Low battery light indicator
Family owned and operated
Invisible Fence of the Jersey Shore
866-634-3647
SPECIAL OFFER!
FREE
*
Battery Back-Up with
installation & training package
indicator light battery Low
solutions-indoors fordable Afff
9 1 since brand trusted Most
out & s
973
Fence is a registered trademark of Invisible Fence, Inc.
Fence of the Jersey Shore. Certain system with Invisible
*Previous purchases excluded. Non transferable and
operated and owned Family
g y
All rights reserved. Inc.
Fence of the J . 2012 Invisible restrictions may apply ain
No cash value. O fers. with other offfers. can not be combined
ence of visible F In
d
Fence, Inc. Invisible Jersey Shore. 2012 Invisible
outdoor installed fer valid with new professionally Offfer valid with new professionally
866-634-3647
e sey Shor er the J of
Hunter Jumper Series Show
Set for June 2
The second show of the Hunter
Jumper Series sponsored by the
Cumberland County 4-H Horse Program
will be held on June 2. The shows will
begin at 8 a.m. and will be held at the
Cumberland County Fairgrounds located
at 3001 Carmel Road in Millville. Other
shows in the Cumberland County Hunter
Series are scheduled for August 18 and
September 15.
The shows will include 50 classes. The
entry fee is $12 per class if registered by
June 1 or $15 per class for day of show
entries. Prizes and first through sixth
place ribbons will be awarded in each
class. Grand Champion and Reserve
Champion awards will be given. This is a
ECSJ Pointed Show.
This Hunter Show Series is sponsored
by the Cumberland County 4-H Horse
Program Hunter Jumper Series
Committee. Members are Gayle Emel,
Jennifer Tweed and Karen Killeen.
The show is open to all ages and will
be held rain or shine. To register or for
more information, call the 4-H Center at
856-451-2800 ext. #3.
For more information about the
Cumberland County 4-H Program call the
same number or visit the Cumberland 4-
H website at cumberland4h.com.
4-H Dressage Schooling Show
Series
The Cumberland County 4-H Horse
Program hosted a Dressage Schooling
Show on Sunday, May 6. This show was
the first show of a series of four shows to
be offered in the 2012 Cumberland
County 4-H Dressage Schooling Show
Series. Other shows in the 4-H Dressage
Schooling Series are set for June 3, July
and September 9.
Dressage is an advanced training disci-
pline of horses in which horse and rider
combinations perform precision move-
ments at the walk, trot and canter. Entries
are judged on exactness and consistency.
Dressage has often been described as bal-
let on horseback.
The shows include introductory level,
training level and first level tests as well
as supper level tests. The cost is $25 per
ride. Prizes and first through sixth place
ribbons are awarded in each class.
Closing date for entries is the Monday
before the show.
CUMBERLAND 4-HERS IN
STATE 4-H DOG SHOW.
Four members of the Puppy
Power 4-H Club participated in the
Seeing Eye Division of the New
Jersey State 4-H Dog Show on
April 28 at the School of
Environmental and Biological
Sciences, Cook Campus of
Rutgers University in New
Brunswick. Cumberland 4-H
members and their dogs who par-
ticipated include:
Jessica Rottkamp of Shiloh
and her dog Elliott,
Ashley McKishen from
Bridgeton and her German
Shepard Maggie,
Doug Forbes of Vineland and
his dog Myrtle and
Andrea Cappellucci of Millville
and her Golden Retriever Kagney.
The leader of the Puppy Power
4-H Club is Joan Maloney of
Bridgeton.
For information about the 4-H
Seeing Eye Puppy Raising Project
call the 4-H Center at 856-451-
2800, ext. 3.
The 4-Hers attending the State
4-H Dog Show as well as the other
members of the club will be doing
a demonstration on Tuesday, July
3, 7:15 p.m. at the Cumberland
County Fair.
PETAmail
In light of the recent Diamond Pet
Foods salmonella outbreak that sick-
ened more than a dozen people,
readers should know that salmonella
may not be the only unsavory
ingredient lurking in their animals
kibble (Reuters).
Many commercial dog and cat
foods contain ground-up parts of
animals deemed unfit for human
consumption because they fall into
one of the four D categories
dead, dying, diseased, or disabled.
Most companion animal foods also
contain hormones, pesticides, antibi-
otics, and other additives that can
be toxic, such as the melamine that
was linked to the deaths of least 16
animals and sickened thousands
more in 2007.
Its easy to prepare wholesome,
plant-based foods for beloved animal
companions in our own kitchens,
using ingredients like chickpeas,
lentils, oats, brown rice, and the sup-
plements Vegedog or Vegecat (avail-
able at www.Vegepet.com.
Its important to ensure that your
animals nutritional needs are being
met. Talk to your veterinarian and
check out Making Kind Choices by
Ingrid Newkirk (available at
www.PETA.org and libraries) for sim-
ple vegan dog and cat food recipes.
Lindsay Pollard-Post, The PETA
Foundation, 757-622-7382, ext. 8107
or LindsayP@petaf.org
PET
CARE
For a no-obligation
advertising consultation,
call 856-457-7815 or e-mail:
sales@grapevinenewspaper.com today.
Advertise in
The
Grapevine
and get
incredible
results.
Buds Pet
Home Care, LLC
Bud Sulzman
Care For Your Pets
Check Your House Daily
Take In Your Mail
Water Your Plants
696-8290
I

m
S
o
H
a
p
py
A
t
H
o
m
e
!
Since 1987
While youre away or at work, leave your
home & your pet in the capable care of
One day of pet care service FREE for
NEW Customers. Mention this ad. One Day FREE!
Grapevine 16-21 050912-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:48 PM Page 20
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
2
1
}
1200 Harding Highway (Rt. 40)
GAROPPO GAROPPO
FEED & PET SUPPLIES
HOURS: Monday - ursday 7am - 6pm Friday 7am - 7pm Saturday 7am - 5pm Sunday 9am - 3pm
20
%
OFF
Not to be combined with any other offer. Exp. 6/15/12
Any Pet Toy Any Collar
or Leash
Not to be combined with any other offer. Exp. 6/15/12
15
%
OFF
Not to be combined with any other offer. Exp. 6/15/12
Any
Equine Fly
Repellent
15
%
OFF
Not to be combined with
any other offer. Exp. 6/15/12
15
%
OFF
Not to be combined with any
other offer. Exp. 6/15/12
All
Fountains
Not to be combined with
any other offer. Exp. 6/15/12
Any Tetra
Pond Koi
Food
20
%
OFF
15
%
OFF
Any
Hummingbird
Feeder
A GGG G O PP PP OO RR AA O O P P P P O O R R A A OO O
1200 H
E E F
t. 40) y (RRt. 40) waay (R h ig g H din r a 00 H
E I L P P U S T E P & D E
)
S E
This Dressage Schooling Show Series is
sponsored by the Cumberland County 4-
H Horse Committee. The officers of this
group include President, Janet Biederman
of Bridgeton; Vice President, Ingrid
Bergen of Vineland; Secretary, Denise
Smith of Bridgeton and Treasurer, Barbara
Newkirk from Roadstown.
The show is open to all ages and ride
times will be assigned. To register or for
more information, contact Ingrid Bergen,
show secretary at inkydoots@aol.com or
856-692-6673.
Greyhound Adoption
Tens of thousands of greyhounds are
bred every year for the 27 racetracks in
the United States, according to the U.S.
Humane Society. Theyre intentionally
over-bred so there will be ample to
replace old and underperforming grey-
hounds at the tracks. Each year, thousands
of these retired dogs do not find a home;
they are killed.
Retired police officer Irvin Cannon, a
dog lover who wrote a recently released
book, For the Love of Dog Tales
(www.FortheLoveofDogTales.com, gives
voice to mans best friend.
These dogs have feelings and intelli-
gence, but they are treated like racing
slaves so people can gamble, Cannon
says. Who is the winner in this sce-
nario?
The Humane Society estimates thou-
sands of retired racing dogs are put to
death every year. Rabbits are another
industry victim; thousands are maimed or
killed in the race-training process.
Cannon says there are some things to
remember for those considering adopting
a greyhound:
They typically dont have issues asso-
ciated with abuse: Greyhounds may not
get a lot of love in the kennels, but are not
often abused by track personnel. They tend
to respond to fear and violence by either
freezing in place or running. Since they are
trained to chase rabbits, they may be
inclined to pursue small running animals.
Greyhounds tend to be intelligent,
timid: These dogs are considered gentle
and reserved, but stubborn. If they sense
they can take control, they will, so owners
should quickly establish authority.
Not used to other breeds:
Greyhounds are born and raised around
people and other greyhounds only. They
may become confused or frightened by
other dogs, and may need to get accus-
tomed to cats.
No fat, little hair: No dog should be
left outside in the cold or heat.
Greyhounds are especially sensitive to
extreme temperatures and rain.
Sweet affection: They do not bite;
they show affection by licking, leaning and
rubbing, much like cats.
Although there is a well-known and
dedicated effort to find homes for aged-
out greyhounds, Cannon said there is only
one way to fix the racing industryit must
be ended. There are several national and
international groups trying to put a stop to
greyhound racing and gambling, including
the Humane Society, and People for the
Ethical Treatment of Animals. Until then,
Cannon hopes these gentle dogs find
homes.
When you adopt a needy canine, you
wont find a better companion, he says,
whether you bring home a greyhound, a
mystery mixed-breed or a purebred
Labrador. I
Irvin Cannon was a poor kid growing up
in Detroit when his family took in a stray
dog. It surprised young Irvin that his
father would be willing to share the fami-
lys meager groceries with a dog, but he
soon discovered the return on their
investment was enormous. A former
police officer in Detroit and Denver, he
also worked as a corrections officer.
Bring In This Ad to Receive
$5 Off Boarding
or Grooming
TIPTOP KENNEL
Boarding Grooming
856-697-0930
tiptopkennel.com
VOTED
BEST
OF THE
BEST
GUARANTEED
TOCONTAIN
ANY DOG
The Most Versatile Underground Fence Made
MARK POLLARD, OWNER-OPERATOR
www.dogguardnj.com
By: Dog Guard Out of Sight Fencing of NJ
FREE ESTIMATES 856-691-6461
Money Back Guarantee
Lifetime Equipment
Warranty
Service & Install
Any System
Vet Recommended
Indoor/Outdoor Systems
Locally Owned & Operated
Year Round Installation
LowPrice Guarantee
Going On
Spring Break?
Need a Loving & Trusting
Place to Watch Your Animals?
Boarding Grooming Training
In & Out Runs
Large Outdoor Exercise Area
Air Conditioned & Heated Kennels
Full Service Master Grooming
(large dogs accepted)
Separate Cattery
856-696-4965
2981 N. DELSEA DR. VINELAND, NJ 08360
www.alottaluv.com
Mon.-Fri. 9 am - 6 pm Sat. 9 am - 4 pm
Sun. 9 am - 11 am & 3 pm - 6 pm
ALOTTA LUV
ANIMAL LODGE
Grapevine 16-21 050912-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:48 PM Page 21
{
2
2
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
WEAVERS
farm market
OOH OWN GHEENHOOSE-GHOWN TOMATOES
OOH OWN ASPAHAGOS
ozN moNoAY
To sATunoAY
BS6-6A1-7ADD
7S9 GAnozN Ho.
PiTTscnovz,
NJ DB31B Grown
& Sold
Here
farm mar
VE WEAAVERS
rket
ERS
farm mar
H O O
E E H G N W O H O O
rket
G A H A P S A N W O
W O H G - E S O O H N E
S O G
S E O T A M O T N W
COMMUNITY CALENDAR

HAPPENINGS
WEDNESDAY, MAY 16
Ronald K. Brownlee Jr Fund-Raiser.
Black Olive Restaurant, 782 S Brewster Rd.
#A1, Vineland, 457-7624. All day, walk-in and
take-outs welcome. 10% of each check will
go to the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society.
THURSDAY, MAY 17
South Jersey Healthcare Seminar:
Living with Joint Pain. Larrys II
Restaurant, 907 N. Main Rd., Vineland.
5:30 p.m. The latest techniques for treating
joint pain will be presented by board-certi-
fied orthopedic surgeon Joseph Bernardini,
M.D., a member of the SJH Orthopedic and
Spine Specialty Group. The event is free
and includes dinner. Seating is limited
and registration is required by calling
1-877-6-ORTHO1 (877-667-8461) or by
visiting www.jointpainseminar.com
FRIDAY, MAY 18
Preschool Round-Up. Cumberland
Christian School, 1100 W. Sherman Ave.,
Vineland. 1:302:45 p.m. 3, 4 and 5-year-
old Kindergarten students may join in a
hands-on experience of the classroom.
Storytelling, coloring, outdoor activities
and a question and answer snack time
that will provide a chance to talk to teach-
ers and administrators. 856-696-1600 to
register. www.cccrusader.org
The Big Night Fundraiser. Eastlyn Golf
Course, Greenview Inn, 4049 Italia Ave.,
Vineland. 6 p.m. Big Brothers Big Sisters
of Cumberland & Salem Counties holds
the 24th annual event, featuring wine
tasting and hors doeuvres pairing along
with silent and live auctions. Tickets
$100 at door. 692-0916 or www.bbbsthe-
bignight.com.
Beginning Knitting. FiberArts Caf, 21
E. Commerce St., Bridgeton. 11 a.m.1
p.m. Four-week session. Class Fee: $25.
Needles, yarn and booklet provided for
learning. Learn how to cast on and bind
off, both the knit and pearl stitches, pat-
tern and chart reading, techniques and a
project will be part of class. Space is lim-
ited so call 856-451-3143.
25th Anniversary Celebration.
Cumberland County Community Church,
1800 E. Broad St., Millville. 6 p.m. Music,
a tour of the buildings, ministry fair,
refreshments and cake. Pastor Sal Roggio
will share the history of the church &
many blessings that the Church has expe-
rienced. All are welcome. 856-327-2222.
High Holiday Cantor. Beth Israel
Congregation, 1015 E. Park Ave., Vineland.
7:30 p.m. Cantor Jack Kessler, services
led by Rabbi Alfredo S. Winter. An Oneg
Shabbat will follow the services, including
songs, zemirot, and stories. 691-0852.
Spring Gala Dinner/Dance. Running
Deer Golf Club, 111 Parvins Mill Rd.,
Pittsgrove, Sponsored by the Greenwich
Tea Party Patriots of So. Jersey. Tickets
$40. Call 856-769-9247 for tickets and
information.
SATURDAY, MAY 19
Italian-American Benevolent
Association Dinner Dance. Merighis
Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave. and Union Rd.,
Vineland. 611 p.m. 12th Annual Dinner
Dance is A Night With Jerry Blavat."
Tickets $60, available at Merighis Savoy
Inn, or by calling 305-2346.
RallyAmerica Rallycross. NJ
Motorsports Park, 8000 Dividing Creek
Rd., Millville. Five drivers line up to pilot
high horsepower compact cars jumping
and sliding through race traffic over a
challenging short road course. Also at this
popular family event: Monster Trucks rides,
Kids' Activity Zone, Mechanical Bull Riding
and more. Two adults and two kids $40.
Landlord Training Seminar. Lakeside
Middle School, 2 N. Sharp St., Millville. 9
a.m1 p.m. AHOME along with the City of
Millville is sponsoring this free seminar that
covers a variety of topics including Section
8 provisions, Landlord/Tenant Law, munici-
pal registration, inspections and code com-
pliance, and keeping properties crime-free.
Continental breakfast and lunch.
Sailing from Bivalve in May
NJ's Tall Ship returns to
Cumberland County! A.J. MEERWALD
public sails and charters available at
2800 High St, Bivalve - Port Norris, NJ.
Make reservations at www.bayshoredis-
covery.org or call 856-785-2060.
*Souper Saturdays: Come for a sail
in Bivalve on a Saturday and receive a
coupon for $2 off any $10 purchase at
the Oyster Cracker Cafe! The 2 p.m. on
Thursdays, Fridays and Saturdays.
Sunday, May 20: Afternoon Sail
1:30-4 p.m., Music Sail 57:30 p.m.
Local musicians will entertain on board.
*Saturday, May 26: Marine Critters
Trawl Sail 1:304 p.m. Haul in & iden-
tify local marine life. Evening Sail
57:30 p.m.
Sunday, May 27: Lighthouse Cruise
126 p.m. Learn about the Bay's light-
houses; sail past as many as wind and
tides allow. Bring a camera!
Monday, May 28: Memorial Day
Birding Sail 8 a.m.12 noon. Enjoy
complimentary breakfast, as experts
help spot and identify local birds and
other wildlife. Spotting scopes and
field guides will be available. Bring
your cameras and binoculars!
Memorial Day Staycation Special Sail.
12:30 p.m. (Discounted prices!)
ICYCLE PEPAIP
10X Dff!
For the honth of hay!
(Lcbor only. We Repcr
All 8rcnds o] 8cycles)
7ues. - Thurs. 10am - 6m
Fr. 10am - 7m - Sat. 10am - 4m
Closed Sunday and Monday
www.mojobicycIeshop.com
..
C0ME Rl0E WlTH US!!!
CIANT ICYCLES
Now In
Stock
Stop n cnd see the 2012 Lne
WiIier ItaIian Poad
icycIes. FuII Carbon
with Shimano UItegra
Rey. $200.00
NDW DNLY
$2350.00
1851 W. LandIs Ave (Near |Ill Pd. E Pt. 55) 7Ineland, NJ 08J60
. .
.mojobicycIeshop.com www w.
Closed Sunday and Monday
r. 10am - 7m - Sat. 10am - 4m
ues. - Thurs. 10am - 6m 77u
E R E R MM 00 CC
ve (N
All 8rcnds o] 8cycles)
e Repcr . WWe (Lcbor onlyy.
or the honth of hay! F
10X Dff!
P AI ICYCLE PEPPA
AAv . LandIs 1851 W
HH TT l0E Wl l0E Wl RR
Near |Ill Pd. E Pt. 55)
$2350.00
Y NLLY DW D N
Rey. $200.00
a himano UItegr S with
on arb C uII icycIes. F
taIian Poad I WiIier
S
!!! !!! SS H U H U
Ineland, NJ 08J60 7
Stop n cnd see the 2012 Lne
tock S
n I ow N
ICYCLES CIANTT
Grapevine 22-25 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:22 PM Page 22
Community Yard Sale. New Horizons
Head Start Center, 240 Walnut St.,
Bridgeton. Shopping and family fun, and
learn more about PathStone services in
the county. Sale of donated items, includ-
ing clothes, furniture, and home goods will
benefit PathStone operations. Details
about event or PathStone: 856-696-1000.
SUNDAY, MAY 20
Afternoon Tea. Across the Pond, 129 N.
High St., Millville. 11 a.m.3 p.m. Menu
includes soup and salad,
scones, tea sandwiches,
miniature desserts.
RSVP required, seating
limited, pay at time of
reservation. Non-refund-
able event. $25 per per-
son (includes tax and
gratuity). 765-7381.
Boat Christening Ceremony. Merighi's
Savoy Inn, 4940 E. Landis Ave., East
Vineland, 47 p.m. VHS crew team honors
Paul Harris and Dr. Thomas Doc
McCann for their dedication and commit-
ment to the crew program. $20 per per-
son, $10. children under 12. RSVP at 856-
498-9690 or 856-285-4681.
Anniversary Celebration. Historic
Friendship Church, Weymouth and
Friendship roads, Buena.
Landis Memorial Dedication
Ceremony. Siloam Cemetery, 550 North
Valley Ave., Vineland. 1-4 p.m. Dedication
of the recently finished memorial to
Vinelands founder. 405-0187.
MONDAY, MAY 21
NAMI Meeting. Chestnut Assembly of God,
2554 E. Chestnut Ave., Vineland. 79 p.m.
Cumberland County Chapter of the National
Alliance on Mental Illness holds its busi-
ness/support group meeting. Juanita
Nazario, new Administrator, Cumberland
County Mental Health Board, and Director
of Cumberland County Alcohol and Drug
Abuse Services, will discuss the merger of
NJs Divisions of Mental Health Services and
Addiction Services. 691-9234 or 794-9987.
TUESDAY, MAY 22
City Council Meeting. Council
Chambers, City Hall, Vineland. 7:30 p.m.
Formal official action may be taken at
such meetings on any and all business
involving The City of Vineland. Pre-meeting
conferences at 7 p.m., at the Council
Caucus Room, City Hall.
SPORTS HAPPENINGS
SATURDAY, MAY 19
3rd Annual Walk 4 Josh. Parvin State
Park, Thundergust Picnic Area, Pittsgrove,
10 a.m. All proceeds benefit the oncology
unit in Dupont Hospital of DE. Registration
10 a.m. For more details, email
Karenbateman84@yahoo.com
2nd Annual P.U.S.H. Walk. Chestnut
Assembly of God, 2554 E. Chestnut Ave.,
Vineland. Registration 8:30 a.m., walk at 9
a.m. Sponsored by Soup Kitchen of Vineland
Auxiliary, and benefits People United To Stop
Hunger. E-mail: soupkitchen@verizon.net.
SUNDAY, MAY 20
Walkathon for the ARC. Parvin State
Park, Pittsgrove, registration at 9 a.m.,
walk begins at 10 a.m. Proceeds benefit
ARC of Cumberland County. Participants
choose a 3.1 Challenge Walk, a 2-Mile
Walk or a Mile Wheelchair Trail. First 200
walkers receive a T-shirt w/$20 donation.
Run for Michael. Bellview Winery, 150
Atlantic St., Landisville. 5K Run and 1K
Walk to raise funds for children facing seri-
ous illnesses or other crises. One of the
beneficiaries is Michael Barner, a 7th
grade Rossi Middle School student diag-
nosed with aplastic anemia three years
ago. Race begins at 10 a.m., registration at
8 a.m. Fee is $25. Under age 14 are free.
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
2
3
}
Millville 1601 N. High Street 856-327-7727 | Vineland 2135 N. Delsea Dr. 856-794-2222
www.poolsandgames.com
3.5%
Sales Tax
We Will
Match Internet
Pricing!
Family Fun Time starts
at Landi Pools & Games
In Ground Pools Starting at $20,000
Above Ground Pools Starting at $795
Spas Starting at $2,695
p . w w w
High Street Millville 1601 N.
s e m a g d n a s l o o p
Vineland 2135 N. | 856-327-7727
m o c . s
856-794-2222 . Delsea Dr. N.
OAKCREST HIGH SCHOOL ALL-
GENERATIONS FAMILY PICNIC will
be held Saturday, June 2, 10 a.m.to 7
p.m. at Egg Harbor Lake, 2400
Philadelphia Ave., Egg Harbor. Each
car entering facility will be responsi-
ble for contributing meat for grilling
by Grill Master Louis Miller. Bring
your own side dishes and drinks.
Music provided by Robert Earl Hill.
Alcohol permitted only in designated
areas (for those of legal drinking
age). Swimming ($2 badge fee), six-
man volleyball board games, prizes,
corn domino tournament.
MONDAY, MAY 21
You can be part of the decision-
making process within your commu-
nity at the Tri-County Call to
Service Summit. Youll learn how to:
Have real influence on decisions
affecting your life
Bring your concerns to the table
Help make your community better
Improve services for children
The event is slated for Monday,
May 21, 68 p.m. at Gloucester
County College, 1400 Tanyard Road,
Instructional Room 430, Sewell.
This Summit is being facilitated
by The Citizens Campaign, a non-
partisan organization that provides
people with the tools to find a con-
structive voice in their community
and beyond.
To RSVP or for more information,
contact Felix at 856-336-8335 or
https://citizenscampaign.wufoo.com
/forms/tricounty-call-to-service-
summit/
This event is free and open to
the public. Registration and light
fare begin at 5:30 p.m.
Grapevine 22-25 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:22 PM Page 23
{
2
4
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
Fabrizio Chiropractic
Is Now Oering
Technology!
Nothing is more Precious than your Health.
Dr. Theresa A. Fabrizio
1790 N. Main Rd. Vineland
(856)692-0077
Fax: (856)692-4008
(QJLQHHUHG WR
PLPLF WKH WKLFNQHVV
ZHLJKW HODVWLFLW\
RI KXPDQ VNLQ
Latex free, water-resistant and breath-
able tape made of pure cotton with
100%acrylic hypoallergenic adhesive.
Decrease Strain On Muscles
Helps To Reduce Muscle
Cramping
Helps to Restore Normal
Muscle Activation
Heal From Injury Faster &
Prevents Further Injury
Increase Range of Motion
Helps to Alleviate Pain &
Pressure Points
In Our Schools
I
Essayist Wins First Place in Statewide Contest
Aiden Rodriguez, a
Vineland High School
senior, won a first place
award in the recent
Sister Rose Thering
essay contest and was
honored in a ceremony
at Seton Hall University,
where Sister Rose was a
professor for more than
four decades.
Rodriguez is a stu-
dent in Mrs. Terry
Kuhnreich's Search for
Conscience class at VHS
South.
Sister Rose Thering was a nun in the Dominican order who challenged
Christian teachings that blamed Jews for the death of Jesus for thousands of
years. Her work had a direct bearing on the historic Vatican II council that
reformed the Catholic church's position on relations between Christians and
Jews. Thering met with Popes and was an inspiration to many people, dedicating
her life to reducing prejudice and promoting dialogue among all people.
Rodriguez wrote his essay on this year's topic: "How does Sister Rose's pas-
sion relate to an experience in your life?"
Rodriguez will be attending Delaware University in the fall. He is an honor stu-
dent, a wrestler and the president of the "Call of Conscience Organization"
(COCO) that helps those in need. The organization grew out of topics discussed
in Kuhnreich's classes.
From left: Nelson Rodriguez, Brittany Rodriguez, Aiden Rodriguez, Mrs. Kuhnreich, and
Mrs. Marilyn Rosenbaum, member of the Sister Rose Thering Fund board of trustees.
Meehan Wins Air Force
Best Application Award
Ryan Meehan, a seventh grader at
Notre Dame Regional School in
Landisville, was awarded First Place in
Engineering and Second Place Overall
at the Cumberland County Science
Fair, giving him the honor of participat-
ing in the Delaware Valley Science Fair.
Ryan was awarded the United States
Air Force Best Application Award at the
Delaware Valley Science Fair and also
placed second in his category, winning
the American Society of Civil
Engineers Award.
CCC Student OHagen
Wins Journalism Award
James OHagan, of Millville, a jour-
nalism major at Cumberland County
College, placed first overall in the New
Jersey Collegiate Press Association two-
year college sports writing category for
his article, Students fight for better
health.
Cumberland County Colleges student
newspaper, The Voice, won third place
for General Excellence in the two-year
college Layout and Design category.
It makes me realize that you can
achieve something bigger than what
others expect of you. Always strive for
better, but realize when youve achieved
it, OHagan said of his award.
Cumberland County College communica-
tions professor Renee Post (left) and CCC
journalism student James OHagan at the
2012 awards luncheon.
Students Get Crash Course in Restaurant Business
Winslow Elementary School kindergarten students in Ms. Fien and Ms.
Cavagnaro's inclusion class took a trip to Gina's Restaurant in Vineland to learn
how to make their own pizza, how a restaurant operates, and what the job of a
chef is. Owner and chef of Gina's, Anthony DePasquale, and his staff donated
their time and lunch to all of the students in the class for the day.
After lunch the students got free water ice from Rita's donated by Rita's
owner, Lou Cicchitti.
This isn't the first time Gina's and Rita's have donated to Winslow School. On
April 26, Mr. Cicchitti gave free Rita's water ice coupons to over 700 students
and volunteers at Winslow School for Bubble Daya day that raises awareness
for students with Autism and their families.
Winslow staff, students and parents pose outside of Ginas restaurant with Anthony
DePasquale and his staff.
Grapevine 22-25 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:22 PM Page 24
Allen Brothers Donate to Project Graduation
Vineland High School's Project
Graduation received a huge finan-
cial boost recently when Robert and
Richard Allen of Allen Associates
donated $5,000 to help pay for the
event, according to Dr. Thomas
McCann, VHS South Principal.
Project Graduation is a free all-
night drug and alcohol-free party
for seniors to celebrate their high
school graduation. The location for
this celebration is always a secret
known only to a few of the organiz-
ers and never revealed to the stu-
dents until their actual arrival at the
site. The cost of the event is about $60,000 each year, including transportation.
"The Allen brothers are famous for their generosity in supporting their alma
mater," said Dr. McCann. "They have helped keep Project Graduation fully funded
for the past six years."
From left: Receiving the check on behalf of the senior class is Chris Lopez, student/ath-
lete. Making the donation is Bobby Allen, right, while Dr. McCann looks on.
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
2
5
}
CeIeBrtImg 1S1 Yers oL VImeImB HIstory
t tBe BIwym OroumBs, LmBIs Avemue just est oL mIm BoB - FBBB PABHINO
Cmg-By-CmBIeIIgBt - FrIBy, my 18 - 2gm
8toryteIIing at the CiviI War Encampment with period
muaic by the PINEY HOLLOW DRIFTER8
FoumBers Dy 2012 - my 19 - 10m- 4gm
Over 50 Living Hiatory Exhibita ceIebrating VineIand Hiatory-Makera!
*UHDW 9LQHODQG ,QYHQWLRQV ,QQRYDWLRQV
Entertainment: The Award Winning 8enior ]OY Dancera
in a Patriotic 8aIute to NationaI OIder Americana Month of May!
)XQGLQJ KDV EHHQ PDGH SRVVLEOH LQ SDUW E\ WKH 1HZ -HUVH\ +LVWRULFDO
&RPPLVVLRQ'HSDUWPHQW RI 6WDWH DQG WKH &XPEHUODQG &RXQW\
%RDUG RI &KRVHQ )UHHKROGHUV WKURXJK WKH &XPEHUODQG &RXQW\
&XOWXUDO DQG +HULWDJH &RPPLVVLRQ
OLDFASHIONBD
FAmILY F0NI
CIvII Wr BttIe
Be-emctmemtI
moBeI TrImsI
Pomy BIBesII
FooB Court VemBorsI
LIVINOHISTOBY
BNHIBITIONSI
VImeImB HIstory mB
CIvII Wr Be-emctorsI
FIeIB OmesI
Scvemger HumtI
mgmoII HIII
Art ActIvItIesI
JOSPH D ONILL
C C C 1 A
W u S S C
n Super Lawyer E : D D
M D &
l >
CHARLS I COANT
l ! L C
C L 8 u S S C C
n Super Lawyer E : D D
A >
21(,// &2$17 3&
Attorneyx ut Iuw
West Chestnut Avenue
vinelanu N}
&Z
$&&,'(17$/ ,1-85,(6 '($7+6
n l n 8 M u
(856} 692-2400
Inclusion in New Jersey Super Lawyers and Best Lawyers in America is based upon peer review rankings by other attorneys and is not a designation by the New Jersey Supreme Court.
Mothers Day Tea at DIppolito School
On Wednesday, May 10, mothers and grandmothers enjoyed an afternoon of light
refreshments and songs performed by their children for Mothers Day during the Mothers
Day Tea in Mrs. Gonzalez and Mrs. Stankers kindergarten class at DIppolito Elementary
School in Vineland. In addition to celebrating their mothers and grandmothers, the stu-
dents also celebrated the birthday of a fellow classmate.
Delsea Black Cultural League Receives Quilt
The Delsea Regional High School Black Cultural League received a handmade
quilt from Delsea bus driver, Debra Sampson, commemorating the clubs 41-year
history. Sampson enjoys quilting and has been a member of the Country Critters
quilting club of Mullica Hill for the past four years. She was inspired to make a
quilt for the club to encourage students to continue learning about African
American history and to appreciate its significance in the history of America.
From left: Members of Delseas Black Cultural League pose with a commemorative quilt
presented to them by Delsea bus driver, Debra Sampson
Grapevine 22-25 051612-de:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:22 PM Page 25
{
2
6
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
Oak Valley
Townhouses & Apartments
www.oakvalleyapartments.com
Rental Ofce #711 Mon. - Fri. 10am - 5pm
1301 S. Lincoln Ave.Vineland, NJ
CALL TODAY (856) 696-1929
Three Bedroom Townhomes
One & Two Bedroom Apartments
Pet Friendly Community
DISCOUNTS FOR:
Police Fireman Military
One
of the
Best
Apartm
ent Com
m
unities
MOVE IN BY
AUG. 1, 2012 &
RECEIVE UP TO $500
TOWARDS MOVING
EXPENSES
OPEN HOUSE
SATURDAY, MAY 19, 2012 10 AM TO 2 PM
Discover our peaceful and tranquil setting. Be surrounded
by the beauty of nature while enjoying your new home.
13 N MONTE CARLO CT.:
Just Reduced 109,900 104,500
Two Bedroom Two Full Bathes LR Alarm System
Kitchen w/Dining Area, Garbage disposal, Water Filter
/Kitchen Sink Walk In Closet & Additional Closet In
M Bdrm Laundry Rm Two Storm Doors
11,000+ in new upgrades include: Newly installed walk in
shower m. bath (never used); Handicap hand rails installed in both
bathrooms; Built in-pull out pantry cabinet in kit; Pull down shelf in
cabinet over sink; New glass top electric stove; Stackable washer
dryer; new wood laminate ooring throughout; New faux wood
blinds & pleated custom shades in all rooms; Concrete skirt around
entire exterior of house; Exterior shutters recently painted & front
porch reconstructed in maintenance free plastic lumber; Handicap
ramp in maintenance free plastic lumber; Electric installed in stor-
age shed; Shelves added in m. bedroom walk-in closet & laundry
rm; Ceiling fans in m. bedroom and dining area
FOR SALE
BY OWNER
For Sale by OwnerTwo Houses - Penn Lincoln Adult Comm.
Price Negotiable. All reasonable offers will be considered for QUICK Sale!
MUST SEE to appreciate BOTH recently renovated with upgrades $11,000+
81 CAPRICE COURT:
Just Reduced 129,900 124,500
Large Front Porch Vaulted Ceilings Throughout Two Bedrms Two Full Baths Living
Rm Dining Rm Dishwasher Garbage Disp. & Water Filter Under Kit. Sink & Many
Cabinets Sunroom Off Dining Rm Two Walk In Closets - One Large & One Smaller
Large Laundry Rm Cable & Phone Jacks In All Rms Storage Shed Concrete Drive
Fits Three (3) Cars Alarm System *Private backyard-no homes behind residence
Over $12,000 in new upgrades include: Additional built in closet in master
bedroom; All new top quality carpeting throughout-neutral shade; Main
bathroom tiled; new light xture, faucets & other improvements; New faux wood
blinds in all rooms; Ceiling fan in master bedroom; Ceiling fan w/light & remote
control in DR; Concrete skirt around entire exterior of house; Two storm doors -
high quality; Shelves added in m. bedroom walk-in closet & laundry room; Built
in custom bookcases in guest bedroom/ofce; Exterior shutters and front porch
recently renished & painted
N
E
G
O
T
I
A
B
L
E
N
E
G
O
T
I
A
B
L
E
609.364.2757
Jill Perry-Zaborowski
Jack W. Zaborowski
Keller Williams Realty
Direct 609398$OLD (7653)
Cell 6098920512
1 Atlantic Ave.
Ocean City, NJ
www.TEAMOCJACK.com
www.jackandjillattheshore.com
Diamond Beach Townhouse $299,900
This townhouse in the elite Diamond Beach is located in a much
sought after community with its private beaches and it is priced to
sell. This home has 3BR, 2BA, with master on the rst oor, cathedral
ceilings, skylight, replace, large deck, outside shower, storage, and
off-street parking. Walking distance to the beach.
www.teamocjack.com 609-602-7140
Ocean City Condo $354,900
This 2nd oor condo offers 3BR, 2BA with great open living space.
There is plenty of off-street parking and storage too. This condo is the
ideal location for someone that wants to be close to the boardwalk
and amusements, yet far enough away that you dont have all the
noise. It is all convenient to the NEW Rte 52 causeway making getting
into and out of Ocean City easy. This condo is priced to sell. Dont
miss out on this opportunity and move in time for the Summer.
Somers Point Waterfront Condo
There are views from all the living areas of this condo including the
bedrooms. This spacious condo offers newer appliances, open living
space, beautiful marble master bath with jacuzzi tub, and large decks
in the front and the back. You can view sunrises and sunsets without
leaving your home. Convenient to shopping, the NEW route 52 causeway
into Ocean City, the Parkway, and many restaurants in Somers Point.
www.teamocjack.com 609-602-7140
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
The following transactions of $20,000 or more were filed with Cumberland County in
the month of March 2012 (transactions may have occurred in an earlier month).
Names listed may, in some cases, be those of buyers or sellers representatives.
BRIDGETON
76 Elmer St., Ralph C Watson to Robert
C Thompson on 4/2/12 for $40,000
130 West Broad St., Joseph W Veight to
Luis Roman on 4/2/12 for $95,000
40 Fayette St., Pseudo Properties II LLC
Bridgeton to Kevin Fiorani, Jr. on 4/2/12
for $170,000
78 Elmer St., Sherie L Watson to
Rebecca Albert on 4/3/12 for $20,000
112 Belmont Ave., Shirlain Hullex-Brown
(Ind. Per. Rep.) to Vincent J Parenti, Sr.
on 4/3/12 for $60,000
466-8 N Pearl St., Julio Reyes to Ysidro
Cabrera on 4/4/12 for $100,000
COMMERCIAL TWP
173 Point Breeze Dr., Stonecrest Income
& Opportunity Fund LLC to Mike Dubrink
on 4/2/12 for $17,000
1465 Spring Garden St., Jennie A Lubeck
to Robert S Watson on 4/4/12 for
$15,000
1404 Osborne Dr., United States of
America to Eugeneia Caprioni on 4/4/12
for $40,000
DEERFIELD TWP
701 Kenyon Ave., Steven J Richardson,
Esq. to AJB Residential Realty
Enterprises Inc. on 4/9/12 for
$1,650,000
DOWNE TWP
933 Union St., Donna F Bailey (by Atty.)
to Kevin H Nocon on 4/3/12 for $45,000
HOPEWELL TWP
138 Stave Mill Rd., Dorothy Laspada to
Keith R Lebold on 4/4/12 for $110,000
LAWRENCE TWP
951 Ramah Rd., Luz C Ortiz (Est. by
Adm.) to Thomas DiGuiseppi on 4/4/12
for $46,000
13104 Buckshutem Rd., Vitality Group
LLC to George R Loose on 4/4/12 for
$226,000
MILLVILLE
405 Buckshutem W Rd., Dorothy E
Braksator to Anthony Nunnciato on
4/2/12 for $13,000
516 9th Ave. North, Christina
Stranaghan, Exec. to John G Workman on
4/2/12 for $80,000
2000 Miller Ave., Jean Metsger (by Atty.)
to Eunice R Jones on 4/2/12 for $86,000
387 Peek Ave., Maria Cortez Gallagher
(Ind. Exec.) to Amanda Williams on
4/2/12 for $92,500
9 Homestead Dr., Suzanne Merighi
(Exec.) to Jacqueline Hooven on 4/2/12
for $180,000
5 Nicholas Ct., Pleasant Properties LLC
to Richard A Sharp on 4/2/12 for
$188,900
55 Tomasello Dr., Sherwood Forests
Homes LLC to Douglas Cossaboon on
4/2/12 for $209,900
2368 W Main St., Salvatore F Tedesco to
Theodore F Cooper, III on 4/3/12 for
$156,551
412 Manor Ave., David M Stolar to Taran
Winchester on 4/4/12 for $130,000
2225 Mistletoe Ln., Cheri Hall to Jason
Moore on 4/5/12 for $70,000
808 Coombs Rd., Alice M White to
Samantha M White on 4/5/12 for $100,000
230 S Fourth St., Nationstar Mortgage
LLC to Archway Community Properties II
LLC on 4/9/12 for $12,450
UPPER DEERFIELD
175 Landis Ave., Catherine M Trembley
(by Atty.) to Phillip A McIntosh on 4/2/12
for $92,500
Grapevine 26-32 051612:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:32 PM Page 26
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
2
7
}
OWN YOUR OWN HOME
Helping Clients with buying a home through Lease/
Purchase options.
Coldwell Banker Excel Realty has teamed up
with Builders offering Lease/Purchases on newly
constructed homes in the Millville and Vineland areas.
We base your prole on income and
references not just Credit! We be-
lieve that everyone should have the
opportunity to own their own home!
Call April Puesi at
856 392-1523
for the list of new construction homes offered today!
856-696-1111
1100 E. Landis Avenue Vineland, NJ 08360
cbexcelrealty.com
We never stop moving.
sm
Each ofce independently owned and operated
Broker/Owner
O
p
e
n
H
o
u
s
e
S
a
t
.
&
S
u
n
.
M
a
y
1
9
t
h
&
2
0
t
h

N
O
O
N
t
o
5
1
1
5
5
,
1
1
6
4
&
1
1
6
1
W
o
o
d
c
r
e
s
t
D
r
.
V
in
e
la
n
d
Retiring Is Easy.
Affording it isnt.
Increase your monthly income with a
government insured Reverse Mortgage
Homeowners must be 62 years or older
and have equity in their home.
You keep the title to your home, and must
keep up insurance and tax payments.*
There are NO credit, income, or health
qualications.
Your proceeds may be used for any
purposefrom everyday necessities to
setting aside a cash reserve.
NO monthly mortgage payments as long
as you occupy the home!
A Reverse Mortgage will NOT impact
your Social Security and Medicare benets.
Angela Goldberg
Branch ManagerNMLS #243545
Ofce: 856-692-9494
agoldberg@gatewayfunding.com
1117 E. Landis Ave, Suite C Vineland, NJ 08360
*Consult your tax adviser
*Consult your tax adviser Gateway Funding Diversied Mortgage Services, L.P. #1071; Branch NMLS #241866; NJ Residential Mortgage Lender License
(#9939819). This is not an offer to extend credit to any individual who may be entitled to a more complete disclosure per RESPA, TILA, HOEPA, or any
other more applicable federal, state, or local law or regulation. Rates, Terms, Fees, Products, Programs and Equity requirements are subject to change
without notice. For qualied borrowers only. Copyright 2011 Gateway Funding Diversied Mortgage Services, L.P. Equal Housing Lender.
Opening Doors to Home Ownership www.gatewayfunding.com
g I nng I iin rri iir tti e RRe
n iin ddi rrd oor ffo fff A
. yy. ssy aas s EEa IIs E
t t n ssn t iis g iit i nng i
x a t d n a e c n a r u s n i p u p e e k
r u o y o t e l t i t e h t p e e k u o Y
m o h r i e h t n i y t i u q e e av h d n a
2 6 e b t s u m s r e n ow e m o H
nmen gover
ease y Incr
n
m y l h t n o m O N
a e d i s a g n i t t e s
m o r f e s o p r u p
d e e c o r p r u o Y
* . s t n e m y a p
t s u m d n a , e m o h
. e m
r e d l o r o s r a e y 2
ed Reverse nt insur
your monthly incom
iin ddi rrd oor ffo fff A .
! h h t
g n o l s a s t n e m y a p e ag g t r o m
. e v r e s e r h s a c a
o t s e i t i s s e c e n y a d y r e v e m
y n a r o f d e s u e b y a m s
e Mortgage
me with a
tt. t n ssn t iis g iit i nng i
. s n o i t a c i l a u q
c n i , t i d e r c O N e r a e r e h T
p p
c e S l a i c o S r u o y
M e s r e v e R A
y p u c c o u o y s a
h t l a e h r o , e m o c
y p
h Manager NMLS #243 Br
Angela Goldberg
. s t e n e b e r a c i d e M d n a y t i r u c
t c a p m i T O N l l i w e ag g t r o M
! e m o h e h t
3545
*C t F di Di *C
Opening Doors to
wers onl or qualied borro F without notice.
w or local la te, sta pplicable federal, other more a
This is not an offer to extend credit (#9939819).
teway Funding Divers C lt t d i G *Consult your tax adviser Ga #1071 B h NMLS #241
in
.gatew www o Home Ownership
g teway Funding Diversied Mortga Copyright 2011 Ga . ly
Programs an Products, ees, F erms, T tes, Ra tion. or regula
y individual who may be entitled to a more comple to an
#1071; Branch NMLS #241 L P. L.PP. i vices, S ge Ser i d M t sied Mortga
ve, Suite C V 1117 E. Landis AAve, Suite C V
agoldberg@gatewayfun
ce: 856-692-94 Of
h ManagerNMLS #243 anc Brranc
L d Li
*Consult your tax adviser
wayfunding.com
. Equal Housing Lender L.PP. vices, ge Ser
nd Equity requirements are subject to change
y or an A, HOEPPA, TILA, A, losure per RESPPA, ete disc
ge Lender License 1866 NJ R idential Mortga 1866; NJ Residential Mortga
neland, NJ 08360
nding.com
494
3545
161 Rosenhayn Ave., James Hanan, Jr.
to Kimberly Paulino on 4/2/12 for
$127,000
30 Partridge Ct., Cumberland County
Sheriff to Police and Firemens
Retirement System & C. on 4/5/12 for
$10,012
54 Victory Rd., Vanessa Rice to Eric
Pepper on 4/5/12 for $115,000
VINELAND
520 E Plum St., Edward Ricciardi to
Felipe Cruz on 4/2/12 for $40,000
235 W Almond St., Francis J Corsiglia
to Migdalia Zabalier on 4/2/12 for
$114,000
1782 Jackson Dr., Barbara S Stubbs
(Adm.) to Claribel Diaz on 4/2/12 for
$115,000
3340 Hance Bridge Rd., Robert Burke
to Korinn Fries on 4/2/12 for $115,000
944 Sawyer Ave., Lorraine Barber to
Carmen Flores on 4/2/12 for $124,900
34 Coney Ave., Thomas J Riggione to
Rochelle Gardens Inc. on 4/2/12 for
$127,000
2958 Independence Ct., Laura
Kousmine to Laura Mowatt on 4/2/12
for $130,000
58 S Myrtle St., Assured Property
Solutions LLC to Felicito Leyva on
4/2/12 for $145,000
319 Laurel St., Efrain Atiles to Ernest N
Brooks on 4/2/12 for $150,000
48 S State St., Gladys Colon to Faye D
Cook on 4/2/12 for $154,000
1237 Shady Creek Ln., Kathy F Cruz to
Omar Perez on 4/2/12 for $163,000
295 Sheridan Ave., Craig Daniel to
Francis Schooley on 4/2/12 for
$175,000
5459 Mays Landing Rd., Linda A
Visconti to Danielle Pennino on 4/3/12
for $223,000
3237 E Chestnut Ave., Nicholas J Lera
(by Atty.) to Joseph J Reymer on 4/4/12
for $91,500
2947 Driftwood Ln., Ellen Marie
Visnakovs to Richard E Greenfield on
4/4/12 for $199,700
846 Sheridan Ave., Douglas Kressley to
Shane D Zanes on 4/5/12 for $270,000
1876 W Walnut Rd., Marion Walker to
Roselake LLC on 4/9/12 for $60,000
2102 E Oak Rd., NVR Inc. (DBA) to
Rajiv Dahiya on 4/9/12 for $170,705
2102 E Oak Rd., NVR Inc. (DBA) to
Maria Guzman on 4/9/12 for $176,995
4501 Bernard Rd., Josue Velez to
William Coffin on 4/9/12 for $200,000
2560 Old Farm Dr., NVR Inc. (DBA) to
Maria Oyola on 4/9/12 for $200,790
1226 Liberty Ave., Landmark
Development No. 4 LLC to Melanie C
Wescott on 4/9/12 for $216,800
1844 Sequoia Dr., John Nicholas Pozza
to Ryan Agostini on 4/9/12 for
$245,900
Grapevine 26-32 051612:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:32 PM Page 27
_-. :- 0- - ~--+t
2012 GREEKFESTIVAL
May 24th, 25th, 26th & 27th, 2012
THE GREEK ORTHODOX CHURCH OF ST. ANTHONY
430 West Wheat Road Vineland, NJ 08360 www.stanthonyvinelandnj.com
During Event: 856-794-5155 Before Event: 856-696-0917
DJ MUSIC EVERY NIGHT &
LIVE BAND ON SATURDAY
$1 ADMISSION CHILDREN 12 & UNDER FREE
RIDES START 6 PM THURSDAY & FRIDAY, 4 PM SATURDAY & SUNDAY
THURSDAY, MAY 24th - Starts at 5:00 pm
Free Pastry with Dinner Entre
All You Can Ride Rides for $15
6:00 pm 9:30 pm
FRIDAY, MAY 25th - Starts at 5:00 pm
Enjoy Greek Dance Performances
SATURDAY, MAY 26th - Starts at 12:00 noon
Enjoy Greek Dance Performances & Live Music by
Dodekanesos Orchestra
SUNDAY, MAY 27th - Starts at 12:00 noon
Enjoy Greek Dance Performances
FULL SERVICE BAR AVAILABLE
INSIDE THE BIG TENT!
SEEOURNEWREDUCED
PRICEMENU
Eat In Or Take Out Delicious Greek Cuisine Including:
Authentic Greek Pastries &Sweets
Visit our Greek Market for authentic Greek
olives, cheeses, coffees, gifts and more!
I
+.-
--

/.-.
)-- m:.- )- )-- 7/. x/-t. )+.t,. ~:..-: I..:/
Roasted Lamb
Cheese &Spinach Pies
Gyro
Mousaka
Souvlaki
Pastitsio
Present this coupon for
$1.00 OFF
$10 Food
Purchase
Coupon Good On
Sunday, May 27th
FromNoon to Close
One Coupon per customer
Valid in the Big Tent
Coupon Code G2012
2012 GREEK FESTIVAL
vent: EEv During
oad R 430 West Wheat
RT O REEK G E H T
vent: 85 Ev 856-794-5155 Before
ineland, NJ 08360 www.stanthonyvinelandnj.com VVineland, NJ 08360 www.stanthonyvinelandnj.com
CHOF R HODOXCHU T
N A BBA E V I L
I S U M J D
56-696-0917
nthonyvinelandnj.com
HONY T N A . ST
Y AAY D R U T AAT SSA N O D N
& T H G I N Y R E V EEV C I
ake Out Delicious Greek Cuisine T n Or I at E
N EME C PRI
E R W RNEE U EEO S
T G I B E H T E D SI N I
AV AR B E C SERVI LL FU
ncluding: I k Cuisine
NU
D E DUC E
TEE ! T N
VAI
--

/.-.
I
+.-
I
/
N
& Y AAY D S R U H T M P 6 T R AAR TTA S S E D I R
ISSIO DM A $1
wee S uthentic Greek Pastries & A
i g , s e e ffe fff o c , s e s e e h c , s e v i l o
a r o ffo t e k r a M k e e r G r u o t i s i V
Pastitsio
ouvlaki S
Mousaka
Gyro
Che
oa R
EN 12 &
Y AAY DDA N U S & Y AAY DA R U T AAT SA M P 4 , Y AAY DDA I R F
R LD CHI
ets
! e r o m d n a s t fft i
k e e r G c i t n e h t u a
pinach Pies S eese &
amb L asted
,
EE
Y
R F R NDE U &
THE SOUP KITCHEN OF
VINELAND AUXILIARY
The Soup Kitchen of Vineland Auxiliary is a non-prot 501 (c) (3): contributions: tax deductible 170 (b) (1) (A) (vi).
DUST OFF YOUR WALKING SHOES
P.U.S.H. 5 mile walk down the sidewalks Of Vineland.
P.U.S.H. People United to Stop Hunger
WHERE:
Registration and start and nish - Chestnut
Avenue Assembly of God parking lot (2554
E Chestnut Ave. Vineland, NJ 08361)
REGISTRATION:
8:30am to 9:00am, Walk starts 9:00am
FEES:
Adults 16 and Older:
Pre-registration - $8.00 Registration $10.00,
Children 10 to 15: (must be accompanied by an adult)
Pre-registration $3.00, Registration $5.00\
Children 9 & Under: (must be accompanied by an adult)
Free
May 19, 2012
Questions: 856-690-5509
or soupkitchen@verizon.net
Make Checks Payable to: Soup Kitchen of Vineland Auxiliary
Mail to: Soup Kitchen of Vineland Auxiliary, PO Box 636, Vineland, NJ 08362-0636
Sponsored by Soup Kitchen of Vineland Auxiliary. All proceeds from the walk go to the Vineland
Ministerium Food Bank to assure that our Vineland neighbors do not go to bed hungry.
{
2
8
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
I
Vintage Vineland { VINCE FARINACCIO }
1940 Snapshot
The recently released 1940 census gives a frozen-in-
time picture of neighborhoods across America
Vineland included.
T
he online release of the 1940
Census offers every U.S. com-
munity a wealth of information
about its existence during post-
Depression America. A statistical snap-
shot of April 1, 1940, the report offers any-
one who has the time and patience the
opportunity to sift through handwritten
records that contain the components by
which a city, town or borough could be
defined at the time. Most importantly, it
offers todays families a glimpse into the
households of their parents, grandparents
or great-grandparents.
Vinelanders who undertake this digital
journey at 1940census.archives.gov will be
transported back to the municipalitys
borough days when it existed as a cozy
one-square-mile town surrounded by a
sprawling Landis Township. Anyone
searching the Vineland online census
results has a much more limited area to
explore than those examining some of our
neighboring communities. Here are some
guidelines to help you on your quest.
Since the online records are digital
images of the seemingly endless paper-
work submitted by census takers and is
not a database with a name search, its
necessary to have some basic information
about the individual(s) being researched
and plenty of leisure time. Once you input
the basic information identifying state,
county and town and hit enter, youll be
presented with a list of enumeration dis-
tricts that form the basis of a municipal
search.
In the Cumberland County section,
Vineland is divided into eight enumera-
tion districts, from 6-73 to 6-80, with the
population of each area identified. Each
listing also contains a brief description of
the streets by which that district is bound-
ed, so its easier to locate the individuals
for whom you are searching if you know
where they resided in 1940.
Once youve selected a district, you will
be able to sort through digital images that
contain the handwritten forms compiled
on the day the census was taken. It may
take a while to scroll through each page
until you arrive at your destination. One
hint would be to scroll down the left por-
tion of the page and look for the street
name(s) listed to see if that image con-
tains the area for which you are searching.
If it does, scroll over to the names and
examine the data. Dont be fooledstreets
disappear and reappear throughout the 30
or so pages of each district, so it may be
necessary to cover all of the digital images
before locating the person.
The selection of questions for the 1940
census, besides the standard inquiry into
name, address, age, sex, birthplace and
education, paid close attention to work
information. Since this was the first cen-
sus to be conducted after the Great
Depression, economic circumstances were
a priority. Thirteen of the 34 main ques-
tions concerned employment, with an
examination of wages, weekly working
hours, employment duration, previous
jobs and industry type. Unemployment
was also addressed in this section. Even a
supplementary series of questions con-
tained work-related queries while also
focusing on womens marital status.
This is the information youll find
about your ancestors once you arrive at
the right digital image. Youll be able to
review the household of the individual,
check the ages of those in residence along
with their marital and job status, place of
origin and a variety of other information.
But dont confine your search to only a
relative. Check out the neighborhood
where this individual lived. Examine the
place of origins and occupations in that
vicinity. Compare the ages of the children
and examine how many surnames you
recognize from those pages. Youll have a
good sense of life in that corner of
Vineland 72 years ago.
The website allows you to download
the information, share it and print out a
copy. If you prefer a hard copy, be sure to
have a magnifying glass ready since the
form is reduced to one page and becomes
rather difficult on the eye when reading
the questions.
The 1940 Census is exciting for us
because its a first. In the distant future,
these documents will be commonplace in a
digital setting and anything produced on
paper will be the rarity. But since we arent
there yet, we can revel in the newness of it
and enjoy the information it offers. I
Grapevine 26-32 051612:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:32 PM Page 28
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
2
9
}
Bye bye ugly veins...
hellooooo summer.
The Vein Center at AMI AtlantiCare
can help get your legs looking and feeling great.
Complimentary Screenings
Are Available.
To discuss treatment options or to schedule
an appointment, please contact us at: 609-652-6094
219 North White Horse Pike, Hammonton, NJ
www.amiatlanticare.com
The Vein Center at Atlantic Medical Imaging treats
the entire spectrum of venous disease from spider
veins to varicose veins. We treat the problem at its
source, resulting in a quicker, less painful treatment
option for you.
Downtown Vineland
{ TODD NOON, EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, VDID / MAINSTREET VINELAND }
I
Lunch on
Landis
After your $8 lunch, check out all the changes on
the Avenue.
E
veryone likes an inexpensive
meal and, during the workday, to
get a good bargain on a quick
lunch comes in very handy.
We will be bringing back Lunch on
Landis for the third year from Wednesday,
May 16 through Tuesday, May 22, as part of
our Keep It Local campaign. Enjoy $8
dollar lunches from special lunch menus
offered at seven downtown eateriesLas
Lomas Fresh Mexican Grille and Lucianos
New Orleans Seafood (both located in the
upper level of Landis MarketPlace, 631 E.
Landis Avenue), Steves BBQ and
Sunnyside Kitchenette (both in the lower
level of Landis MarketPlace), Moris (830
E. Landis Avenue), San Blas Restaurant (13
N. East Boulevard), and The Sweet Life
Bakery (601 E. Landis Avenue).
People look forward to this event and
regularly ask me when we are bringing it
back. I have mentioned it in previous
columns and can now give you the details.
I am posting the restaurants special lunch
menus on our website, so you can look to
see what lunch item strikes your fancy on
any particular day during the promotion.
I hope you take this time to discover the
great places to eat in the downtown.
As part of the Keep It Local merchant
campaign, Lunch on Landis should lead
you to shop and stop into any of our other
fine businesses downtown and check out
all that they have to offer. Each Wednesday,
make sure to take advantage of our Keep
It Local Wednesday campaign and use
your discount card at any of the participat-
ing merchants for some really great bar-
gains. You can also check out our website
to keep track of the bargains that these
businesses are offering. Make sure to keep
checking because some of the specials
change.
Dont have a Keep It Local Wednesday
discount card? You can get one by coming
to the Main Street Vineland office or visit-
ing any of the participating merchants.
***
All of our committees are working hard
on some exciting events and programs and
you will be reading about these in future
columns. This month, our four standing
committeesOrganization, Promotions,
Design, and Economic Restructuringare
holding retreats, rather than their regular
business meetings.
These are brainstorming sessions, held
outside the regular meeting environment, at
which our committee members are free to
think creatively and come up with bold new
ideas, programs, and events for the year
ahead. The retreats held so far have been
productive and I amreally looking forward
to helping to develop some of the ideas put
forth and sharing themwith you. I
For more information on Main Street
Vineland, visit 603 E. Landis Ave., call
794-8653, visit www.mainstreetvineland.org,
or check them out on Facebook.
TELL EMYOU SAWIT INTHE GRAPEVINE!
We have a distribution of 25,000
in the greater Vineland market.
(Including Millville, Bridgeton, Upper Deerfield,
Newfield, Franklinville, Richland, Buena, etc.)
Were Counting On You!
We bring you The Grapevine for free every week and we
only ask one thing in return ... Please let our advertisers
knowthat you sawtheir ads in The Grapevine.
Our loyal readers should be your customers.
For advertising info, call 856-457-7815
Grapevine 26-32 051612:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:32 PM Page 29
{
3
0
}
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
|
M
A
Y
1
6
,
2
0
1
2
MAY 15 THROUGH 19
Nightlife at Bennigans. 2196 W. Landis
Ave., Vineland, 205-0010. Karaoke
Thursdays with Bob Morgan, 9 p.m.-close,
$3 Heinekens, DJ/Dance Party Fridays 9
p.m.-Close, $3 Coronas. All Sports
Packages: MLB Extra Innings, NBA
League Pass, NHL Center Ice, and NFL
Sunday Ticket. $3 23-oz. Coors Light &
$5 23-oz. Call for RSVP and information.
EVERY TUESDAY
Karaoke. The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S. Delsea
Dr,, Vineland. Sing your heart out. 765-5977.
EVERY WEDNESDAY
Salsa Night. The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S.
Delsea Dr., Vineland. Latin-inspired dance
party. 765-5977.
Country Dancing. The Centerton Country
Club & Event Center, 1022 Almond Rd.,
Pittsgrove. 711 p.m.
EVERY THURSDAY
Jazz Duos. Annata Wine Bar, Bellevue
Ave., Hammonton, 609-704-9797. Live Jazz
featuring area's best jazz duos. 6:30 - 9:30
p.m. No cover. RSVP recommended.
Magician Kevin Bethea. Ten22 Bar &
Grill at the Centerton Country Club &
Event Center, 1022 Almond Rd.,
Pittsgrove. 358-3325. 68 p.m. Magician
and sleight-of-hand illusionist performs
his world-class magic.
WEDNESDAY, MAY 16
Hearing Voices, Speaking in
Tongues. Cumberland Players, Little
Theatre, 66 E, Sherman Ave., Vineland. 7
p.m, Award-winning show about love and
schizophrenia starring Boston-based solo
performer Michael Mack. Sponsored by
Cumberland County Guidance Center and
NAMI (National Alliance on Mental
Illness) of Cumberland County. No admis-
sion charge. 856-825-6810, ext. 286 or
dcunningham@ccgcnj.org.
THURSDAY, MAY 17
65th Annual Spring Concert. VHS
South Auditorium, E. Chestnut Ave.,
Vineland. 7 p.m. The Instrumental Music
Department event will include the VHS
Stage Band, the VHS String Ensemble,
and the VHS Marching/Symphonic Band
and will feature a variety of music from
jazz to classical to pop to traditional
selections. The concert is free and open
to the public. 794-6800 ext. 2539.
MAY 18 THROUGH 20
Nightlife at Ramada. Harry's Pub at
Ramada, W. Landis Ave. and Rt. 55,
Vineland, 696-3800. Wed.: Ladies Night,
1/2 price appetizers all night. Happy Hour
Mon.-Sat, 4-6 p.m. $1 off alcoholic drinks.
Wed.Sat., live entertainment.
MAY 18, 19, AND 20
Nightlife at Neptune Restaurant. 1554
S. Delsea Dr., Vineland. Nightly entertain-
ment. Call for details. 692-2800.
Nightlife at The Rail. The Rail, 1252
Harding Hwy, Richland. 697-7245. Thurs.:
Game Night. Fri.: Voodoo Cadillac. Sat.:
Danny Eyer Band.
Nightlife at Old Oar House. Old Oar
House Irish Pub. 123 N. High St., Millville,
293-1200. Wed.: Karaoke 9 p.m., Thurs.:
Danny Eyer Duo 9 p.m. Fri.: Ravioli
Shanker 9 p.m., Sat.: Scott Seabock 9 p.m.
EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Top 40 Dance Party w/ DJ Tony Morris.
The Cosmopolitan. 3513 S. Delsea Dr,,
Vineland. All of the most popular main-
stream dance music. 765-5977.
FRIDAY, MAY 18
Through the Looking Glass. Wallace
School, 688 N. Mill Rd., Vineland. 7 pm.
The play is the sequel to Alice in
Wonderland. Tickets $7, for students $5.
They can be bought at the door, or by
calling 856-362-8887.
Third Friday: Gordon Vincent/Ken
Lang. Bogarts Bookstore. 210 N. High
St., Millville. Free admission. Singer song-
writer. 710 p.m. Author Ken Lang will
sign copies of his book, Walking Among
the Dead ($12.99 paperback), 6-8 p.m.
It is What It is. Big Apple Cafe, 528 N.
Harding Hwy., Vineland, 697-5500. 9 p.m.
Classic rock guitar and vocal trio.
SATURDAY, MAY 19
Adelante. 2nd Annual Home and Garden
Expo-Craft Fair, Buena Vista Camp
Resort, 775 Harding Hwy. (Rt 40), Buena,
765-0118. Live music. J. Jody Janetta on
drums, Paul Woznicki on piano/flute and
Stephen Testa on bass. Sets: 11 a.m.1:40
p.m. www.sjpumpkinshow.com.
Yuni Sabatino. Bogarts Bookstore. 210
N. High St., Millville. Free admission.
Indie soul rock. 79 p.m.
Merritt and Andrea. Big Apple Cafe, 528
N. Harding Hwy., Vineland, 697-5500. 9
p.m. Country duo.
SUNDAY, MAY 20
Dinner Show & Dance: Frank
Hartman/Ken Camp. Neptune
Restaurant, 1554 S. Delsea Drive (Rt.47),
Vineland. 5 p.m. Frank Hartman sings the
American Songbook Dinner Show, includ-
ing songs of Andy Williams, Glen
Campbell, Bobby Darin and Frank
Sinatra. Comedian Ken Camp opens the
show. Dancing afterwards. The sit-down
dinner choices are lobster, prime rib or
chicken franchaise. RSVP $44.95 w/a
cash bar. Call 856-692-2800.
Poetry on High. Bogarts Bookstore. 210
N. High St., Millville. Free admission.
Original poetry and music with host Rita
Lyman and featuring John Jack Mason,
1:30-4:30 p.m.
THURSDAY, MAY 24
Beauty and the Beast, Jr. Mennies
School, 361 E. Grant Ave., Vineland. 6:30
p.m. Mennies School Fine Arts Club
stages the play. Entrance is free, but
donations are welcome.
THROUGH MAY
Stealing Home: How Jackie
Robinson Changed America. African
American Heritage Museum of Southern
New Jersey, MLK Center, 661 Jackson
Rd., Newtonville. The first black Major
League Baseball (MLB) player of the
modern era, Robinson broke professional
baseballs color line by debuting with the
Brooklyn Dodgers in 1947. Museum open
TuesdayFriday, 10 a.m.4 p.m., Monday
and Saturday by appointment. 609-704-
5495 or www.aahmsnj.org. Admission is
free, but donations appreciated.
SATURDAY, MAY 19
JOY Dancers to Perform at
Founder's Day 2012. On any Friday
morning at the Vineland Senior Center
engaging sounds of activity can be
heard. Gentlemen gather about the
pool tables on the main floor with a
click-clack. Ladies congregate in the
main sitting room amid lively conversa-
tion while knitting and crochet needles
go click-clack, too. And, in the larger
basement hall a group of seven dedi-
cated senior women ages 64 through
84 line up in formation with a step-
step, step-ball-change! The JOY Dancers are in rehearsal.
On Saturday, May 19, at the annual Founder's Day celebration, the JOY Dancers
will step-step, step-ball-change in red, white, and blue to an upbeat mix of patriot-
ic/gospel western tunes as a salute to National Older Americans Month this May.
Mary Monteleone and the JOY Dancers have been meeting together for five
years this past March, mastering a current repertoire of 75 dances stepped to the
beat of traditional country tunes with an emphasis on Gospel-Country/Western-
Christian. As founder and director of the group, Monteleone takes "joy" in staying
active and helping others to do the same. "I do this as my way of thanking God
and want Him to have all the glory for what we do," she states emphatically. "JOY
stands for Jesus, Others, and You."
Having danced all her life, and working as a ballroom dance instructor in her
youth, Monteleone didn't want the years to remove her love of the craft. She won-
dered how interested other senior women might be in forming a dance group and
approached Vineland Senior Center director, Mary Barner, with the idea. Soon, she
was working one on one with women, slowly teaching them the basics before
beginning to choreograph to music for performance. Since that time, the JOY
Dancers have performed onstage at Cumberland County College, for the Rotary
Club Talent Search, for a Landis Theatre fundraiser, and consistently keep a busy
schedule of performances at such venues as nursing homes, assisted living facili-
ties, the Veteran's Memorial Home, Buena Gardens, the Baker House, various com-
munity groups, and even churches as part of the worship service.
The ladies have a variety of specially designed costumes to adapt to different
settings or performance themes, sporting custom vests, Western boots, and match-
ing Western hats complete with bright colors and sequins to add to the sparkle of
their performances. Keeping their program audience-interactive, Monteleone takes
time between numbers to teach a step or two to spectators and invite them to join
in the dance. Mingling with guests, they chat and will even pray with you if asked,
accomplishing their mission to spread JOY.
For more information about the Vineland Senior Center and the JOY Dancers,
contact Mary Barner at 697-3543. For details about the upcoming Founder's Day
event, held May 18-19 at the Elwyn grounds on Landis Avenue just east of Main
Road, call 856-205-9334.
Pictured: The JOY Dancers will be performing at Vineland's 2012 Founder's Day at
the Elwyn grounds just east of Main Road on Landis Avenue on Saturday, May 19 at
11:15 a.m., in a patriotic/gospel country music salute to National Older Americans
Month in May. The dance team members are (standing, left to right) Pearl Richer,
Jessie Segens, Mary Monteleone (director), Marlena Ricci, (sitting, left to right)
Nancy Calvario, Anne Sperling, and Virginia Mazzochi.
ARTS & ENTERTAINMENT

SCHOOL PLAYS AND PERFORMANCES, FRANK


HARTMAN, AND NIGHTLIFE AROUND THE REGION.
Grapevine 26-32 051612:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:32 PM Page 30
W
W
W
.
G
R
A
P
E
V
I
N
E
N
E
W
S
P
A
P
E
R
.
C
O
M
|
t
h
e
g
r
a
p
e
v
i
n
e
{
3
1
}
Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m.
To order your classified call, 856-457-7815 or visit
www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds
Call 9 a.m - 5 p.m daily, Deadline for paid ads: Friday, 3 p.m. To order your classified, call 856-457-7815 or
visit www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds. See box below for additional ordering information.
Only $10 per ad, per week, up to 20 words; over 20 words,
$0.50 per word. $0.30 for boldper word/per issue, $3 for a
Border/per issue. Add a photo for $15. Mail Ad & payment or go
online to www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds.
Not responsible for typographical errors. Once an ad is placed, it cannot be cancelled or changed. The Grapevine does not in any way
imply approval or endorsement. Those interested in goods or services always use good judgment and take appropriate precautions.
Acct. No. ___________________________________Exp. Date________ 3 Digit # on back
of card__________
Signature:__________________________________________
Printed Name:______________________________________
Name ___________________________________
Address__________________________________
City__________________________Zip_________
Phone #: ________________________________
email____________________________________
The Grapevine
907 N. Main Rd., Suite 205
Vineland, NJ 08360
www.grapevinenewspaper.com
Mail Ad
Form with
Payment TO:
Classifieds
Call for more information
856-457-7815
1.____________
2.____________ 3.____________ 4.____________ 5.____________
10.____________
15.____________
9.____________
14.____________ 13.____________
7.____________
12.____________
6.____________
11.____________
20.____________ 19.____________ 18.____________ 17.____________
16.____________
25.____________ 24.____________ 23.____________ 22.____________
21.____________
30.____________ 29.____________ 28.____________ 27.____________
26.____________
35.____________ 34.____________ 33.____________ 32.____________
31.____________
40.____________ 39.____________
42.____________
41.____________
44.____________ 43.____________ 45.____________
47.____________
46.____________
49.____________ 48.____________ 50.____________
38.____________ 37.____________
36.____________
8.____________
Check if needed.
Refer to prices above.
JBold
J Border
CLASSIFIEDS
Credit Cards
Accepted:
Having a Yard Sale or Garage Sale?
Its time to make room in that attic, garage or
basement, and theres no better way to get the
word out than to advertise your yard sale in
The Grapevines Classifieds.
Use the form below, or visit
www.grapevinenewspaper.com/classifieds
Deadline is Friday for the following Wednesdays paper.
Micro Electric LLC.
Residential repair, addi-
tions, and services.
Bonded and insured.
no job is too small.
NJ LIC #14256.
Call 609-501-7777
On-going moving sale!
Many household items.
Monday to Saturday,
starting Saturday, May
5th. From 8 a.m. on. Call
Sonya, 856-285-5616.
Precious Hearts Daycare
Open House. Saturday,
May 19, from 10:00 to 1:00.
pm. Christian daycare for
infants 6 weeks to toddlers
3 years old. Enroll now for
September. Located on
100 S. 15th Street, Millville.
856-825-8800.
2011 Dodge Grand
Caravan Pasture Sport.
Car is in excellent condi-
tion, like new. Low
mileage. Asking $3,690.
Call Paul at 609-319-5668.
Have a bike taking up
space in your home?
Please consider donating
it. The Vineland Rotary
Club has partnered with
Pedals for Progress to
export bikes to third-world
countries where they are
needed for transportation.
Also collecting treadle and
portable sewing machines.
Contact Henry Hansen at
856-696-0643 for drop-off
or pick-up.
CAROL'S DOG DEN,
PROFESSIONAL DOG
GROOMING SINCE 2000.
3027 Cedarville Road,
Millville 856-447-3870
or 609-501-7480 $10
first grooming with ad.
Looking for people who
want to make extra money!
Free training videos online
& live daily conference
calls! For info go to
www.unlimitedprofits.me.
BUSH AND TREE TRIM-
MING, SNOW, LEAF, TREE
AND STUMP REMOVAL,
GUTTERS/BASEMENT
CLEAN-OUTS, MOWING,
FIREWOOD SALES.
VINELAND/MILLVILLE
AREA. 856-305-0194
Wanted Dead or alive.
Junk or running cars.
Quick removal. Cash
paid. 856-649-2732.
Steelman's Drywall.
Hanging, finishing and
repairs. No job too big or
small. Free estimate. Call
Joe 609-381-3814.
Turk's Pressure Clean.
Property maintenance.
Vinyl and aluminum sid-
ing, concrete, brick, roof
cleaning, gutter clean-
out. Over 25 years in
business, fully insured.
(856) 692-7470.
John's Lawn Mowing:
Clean Ups, edging, bush
and tree trimming &
stump removal, mulch,
river-rock, gutter cleaning,
Vineland/Millville area
856-305-0194
AJB III Construction.
Licensed and fully insured.
Windows, doors, remodel-
ing, and more. Call us
today at 856-332-7865.
Electrical
Contractor
Pete Construction
Specializing in decks,
roofs and home
remodeling. State
licensed and insured.
Call for a free esti-
mate. 856-507-1456.
East Park Avenue
Apartments. 2 bed-
room, $875/mo.
Includes heat. No pets.
Credit and background
checks. Vineland.
856-696-9045.
New Samsung stain-
less steel refrigerator
with french doors. 29
cu. Feet. Bottom
drawer freezer.
$1,500. Negotiable.
Call after 5:30 p.m.
691-2525
Homecare Provider
available: Prefer to
stay in Cumberland
County. No live in,
but overnight avail-
able. No driving.
Call 856-691-1133 or
856-581-5127
AVON! Career or
pocket money, you
decide! Contact
Maria (ISR) for more
info: miavon@aol.com
or 856-629-2934 Or
visit my website:
www.youravon.com/
miacuzio
Farm Manager
Wanted! Looking for
an experienced farm
manager to manage
and work 200+ acres
in Rosenhayn, NJ.
Please send resume
to cdensten@little-
bearproduce.com
Erica Beauty Salon
now hiring experienced
cosmetologists. Need
to start asap.
Call Jessie at
856-507-9500
Affordable! Home
repairs and clean-
ups. Hunny-do. Get
your hunny-do list
done! Free estimates.
856-466-5903, 856-
466-5803, or 856-
692-7575 at home.
Help Wanted
Home
Improvement
Landscaping
For Sale
Announcements
Services
Bikes Wanted
For Rent
Yard Sale
Do you have a car or boat that is
taking up space in your drive-
way? Are you hoping to sell your
vehicle for some extra cash?
Publicize the sale of your vehicle
by advertising in The Grapevines
Classifieds section. Make your
junk someone elses treasures.
We Buy
Used Vehicles!
See Lenny Campbell See Lenny Campbell
808 N. Pearl St., Bridgeton NJ
(856) 451-0095
Dog Grooming
Items Wanted
For Sale: Beautiful
custom made solid
oak corner piece
entertainment unit.
Unit is in mint condi-
tion. Entertainment
system includes
space for television,
and, above the televi-
sion, there is plenty
of storage for a
stereo and a DVD
player. There are also
two additional side
compartments for
storing CDs or DVDs.
Located below are
two drawers for stor-
age as well. Call
Mike. 856-237-7770
New matresses, low-
est prices! Twins
start at $149.99; Fulls
at $189; Queens at
$229; and Kings at
$379. Call Jack at
856-935-2930 or
609-420-8739
Grapevine 26-32 051612:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:33 PM Page 31
WWW.QUALITY-DENTALCARE.COM
Vineland
691-0290
Bridgeton
451-8041
Next to Acme
& Blockbuster
Across from
new Walmart
TWOCONVENIENT
SMILECENTERS
Love Your Smile
Same Day Caps & Crowns
Full Time Orthodontic Staff Orthodontic License #5738
Locally Owned & Operated
Payment Options to Make Dentistry Affordable
We Will Care For Your Childrens Dental Needs
ZoomWhitening
Dental Implant & Gum Specialist Periodontal License #4086
Evening & Weekend Appointments Available
Your Kids Will Love Our Video Game Room
Interest Free Payment Plans Available
Q
u
a
l
i
ty
Denta
l
C
a
r
e
Todays Cosmetic & Family Dentistry
Spring Special
FULL BRACES
Only $2,995!
When you mention this ad 5/31/12
Scan this
QR code with
your smart
phone to view
our web site.
FR
E
E
W
iFi
in
o
u
r
re
c
e
ptio
n
are
a!
Grapevine 26-32 051612:Layout 1 5/14/12 7:33 PM Page 32

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen