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Vintage Vineland { BY VINCE FARINACCIO }
I
Landis as Author
Vinelands founder was inspired to pen a 27-page historical account
after a trip to Mexico in 1894.
C
harles K. Landiss love of the
arts is generally acknowledged,
but a little known fact is that
he endeavored to pursue his
interests as a writer later in life.
Vinelands founder undertook a brief
literary career in the last decade that
resulted in the publication of a booklet in
1894. Best categorized as a lengthy short
story, this work has long since disap-
peared from all but a few area libraries,
yet it provides an interesting glimpse of
its author.
The story, published under the title
Carabajal: The Jew, A Legend of Monterey,
Mexico, is a retelling of the life of a 16th
century Portuguese expeditionary of
Jewish descent who was appointed gover-
nor of the area once known as New Spain,
the territory that now incorporates much
of Central America, Mexico and Texas.
According to Landis, he was inspired to
tell the tragic tale of this figure after a trip
to Mexico in the early months of 1894.
While there, he came across the history of
Carabajal, claiming that the historical
records are contradictory and incomplete.
Despite the shortcomings, he was able to
weave a 27-page account that was printed
by Cloyd and Smith, a Vineland publisher,
later that year.
Landis begins his story with Spains
King Philip II obtaining a loan from
Carabajal and bestowing upon him the
governorship of New Spain, where he
could establish new colonies and recoup
his investments from the revenue within
those settlements. The kings self-interest,
Landis intimates, is matched only by his
contempt for the man from whom he is
borrowing money.
Soon, Carabajal is setting sail across the
Atlantic with his family, soldiers, several
Catholic priests and others interested in
starting a new life.
Upon arriving in New Spain, the gover-
nor establishes a number of settlements
within the newly created Kingdom of New
Leon. In his colony, located on the site of
Santa Lucia, Carabajal addresses the phys-
ical and aesthetic concerns necessary to
build a thriving community, but for the
first few months, he establishes martial
law, expecting an attack by the Yako
Indians. After sending couriers from
another tribe to a northern location to act
as spies, he awaits their messages about
the Yakos.
When word arrives that an attack is
imminent, he takes his small army and
travels to engage the opposing forces away
from his town. Once he finds an area of
rock to fortify and hide his army, a decoy
unit is dispatched to lure the Yakos to this
location. The plan works, and the Indians
are cut down in the ambush. Rather than
celebrate, Carabajal begins planning for
the revenge that will be unleashed by the
tribe.
It isnt long before couriers bring word
that the Yakos have enlisted the aid of the
Apaches in a new attack on the colony.
This time, Carbajal relocates the colonists
to a mountaintop should their efforts to
thwart the attack fail. He then sets out as
before. Because the two tribes are travel-
ing separately before rendezvousing near
New Leon, he attacks the Apaches in the
same fashion he applied against the Yakos
earlier and was victorious. The Spanish
then attack the larger Yako forces during
the night, winning yet another battle.
Landis tells us that, with the threat
eliminated, Carabajal sets up the condi-
tions he felt were necessary to nurture a
successful colony, such as building roads,
schools, churches and businesses.
Indians are not used as slaves, he
reports, and because the governor
believed in equity, the Indians who work
in the nearby mines are given a share of
the profits.
New Leon grows in wealth. But with
the threat of attack now curbed and the
colony prospering, Carabajal becomes
expendable in the eyes of the clergy.
Resenting the governors religious back-
ground, the priests establish their own
Inquisition and secretly imprison the gov-
ernor and his family so the public will not
know. Carabajal is aware of their inten-
tions and accepts his fate, but when he
learns of his familys incarceration, he
immediately dies of a heart attack. After
the members of the governors family are
burned at the stake, Jews and Indians of
New Leon gather the various tribes in the
surrounding areas and use them to avenge
what the local Inquisition has wrought. I
Next Week: Historical Context
1 2014 Hometown Heroes
The Grapevine proudly presents
this years slate of awardees.
3,4,6 Faces in the News
7 Food for Thought
Croquettes, anyone?
JEAN HECKER
8 REAL ESTATE
11 Prize Puzzle
12 DINING
14 Pharmacy on Landis
Another profile of a downtown
business. GARY HOLLOWAY
15 PET CARE
16 Community Calendar
17-20 2014 HOMETOWN HEROES
20 Entertainment
22 An Interview with Mayor
Bermudez PAUL J. DOE
23 CLASSIFIEDS
Grapevine 1-2 021914:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:07 PM Page 2
Battelini Visits White House
Rebecca Sara Battelini, daughter of Albert and
Denise Battelini of Buena Vista Township, was recently
invited to the White House for the arrival ceremony of
the French Republic President. The President and Mrs.
Obama welcomed His Excellency, Francois Hollande
on February 11. Also in attendance were Vice President
Biden, Secretary of State John Kerry, and UN
Ambassador Susan Rice.
Rebecca, a junior at American University in
Washington, D.C. on a Dean Academic Scholarship, is
double-majoring in political science and international
relations with a specialty in French. She recently
returned from studying abroad at the Sorbonne
University and Access Center in Paris. While in France,
Rebecca also attended classes in other countries and
visited Germany, Spain, Belguim, the Netherlands,
Austria, Hungary, Czech Republic, Monaco, Holland, and Morocco. Rebecca has
interned for Congressman Conyers of Michigan in the House of Representatives
and at the Brady Center to Prevent Gun Violence. She is presently residing in D.C.
and is working at the Washington, D.C. Zoo, student teaches and tutors fellow stu-
dents. She graduated Valedictorian from Buena High School in 2011.
www.dentalcareofvineland.com
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651 E. Landis Ave. Ste. 2, Vineland NJ 08360
A healthy but filling idea for dinnertime.
Anecdote and a
Recipe
I
Food for Thought { JEAN HECKER }
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.
M
y mom was a very wise woman
and she had a lot of great things to
say to us as kids, like Life is what
you make it and you can always make it
over. or You cant depend on anybody but
yourself, but the most infamous of all was
Don't drink all the milk! Egad, Wawa was
just around the corner from our house, all of
us had cars, but every time we sat down to a
meal, that is the first thing she would say to
us! Geez, like we would never have milk in
the house again! When we sat down to din-
ner we always had this specter hanging over
us and I portioned out my sips of milk to last
throughout the meal! Now when I invite my
sister over to dinner, the first thing I say is
Drink all the milk you want!
As I have gotten older, I try to eat a more
healthy diet and have added almond milk to
my regular shopping list. I just love it over
my Special K Multigrain cereal and its a
treat just on its own. I have also added more
vegetarian meals to my repertoire and here
is one of my favorites. I can get the leeks and
mushrooms on my way home at Bergamos
Garden Market and then prep is a snap! Try
it some night when youre in the mood for
something quick and tasty! Serve with a
tossed salad and you have a complete meal.
Potato, Mushroom, and Leek
Croquettes
8 ounces cooked Yukon gold potato
8 ounces sliced mixed mushrooms
1/2 cup chopped leek
1 teaspoon chopped fresh thyme
Cooking spray
1/2 cup shredded Gruyere cheese
1/4 cup grated Parmigiano-Reggiano
cheese
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp black pepper
1 tsp finely minced parsley
1 large egg yolk
1/3 cup all-purpose flour
1 large egg white
2 tsp water
1/2 cup panko (Japanese bread-
crumbs)
2 tbsp olive oil
Press cooked potato through a ricer or
food mill into a bowl.Finely chop mush-
rooms, leek, and thyme in a food processor.
Heat a large skillet over medium heat. Coat
pan with cooking spray. Add mushroom mix-
ture, cook 6 minutes. Add mixture to potato.
Add Gruyre, 2 tablespoons Parmigiano-
Reggiano, salt, pepper, and egg yolk, parsley;
stir until blended. Shape mixture into eight
(2-inch) round patties.
Place flour in a shallow dish. Break up
egg white and 2 teaspoons water in a shallow
dish. Combine remaining 2 tablespoons
Parmigiano-Reggiano and panko in a shal-
low dish. Dredge patties in flour. Dip in egg
mixture; dredge in panko mixture. Heat a
large nonstick skillet over medium-high
heat. Add oil, add patties; cook 4 minutes on
each side or until golden. I
Jean Hecker is a full-time travel agent at
Magic Carpet Travels and a part-time foodie.
She has a BA in Home Economics Education
from Rowan University and enjoys exploring
all facets of the food and restaurant industry.
Grapevine 3-7 021914.qxd:Layout 1 2/17/14 4:11 PM Page 7
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$471$584
The following transactions of $10,000 or more were filed with Cumberland County in the month of December
2013 (transactions may have occurred in an earlier month). Names listed may, in some cases, be those of
buyers or sellers representatives.
REAL ESTATE TRANSACTIONS
BRIDGETON
138 Walnut St., JWM5625 LLC to
Charles J Tortella on 12/18/13 for
$47,000
COMMERCIAL TWP
218 Jute Rd., Stephen S Miller to
Timothy Finch on 12/12/13 for $72,150
323 Sandalwood Rd., John Goss to
Robert H Watson on 12/17/13 for
$10,200
7606 Magnolia Dr., Sec. of Housing &
Urban Development to Thomas
DiGuiseppi on 12/18/13 for $40,000
DEERFIELD TWP
536 Pine St., Darrin Pulman to
Adam R Capoferri on 12/18/13 for
$118,000
FAIRFIELD TWP
749 Fordville Rd., Homeward
Residential Inc. (Atty.) to Timothy R
Hoffman on 12/16/13 for $43,299
LAWRENCE TWP
333 Main St., Margaret S Moore (by
Atty.) to Martin Vera Aguilar on
12/16/13 for $45,000
3035 Lexington Ave., Stone Financing
LLC to Tracy Gonzalez on 12/18/13 for
$158,763
3035 Lexington Ave., Ediberto Medina
to Stone Financing LLC on 12/18/13 for
$174,500
MAURICE RIVER TWP
63 Bay Ave., Russell C Corson, III to
Michael D Manno on 12/18/13 for
$30,000
MILLVILLE
705 Shewchenko Ave., Michael T
Kracke, Sr. to Stephen S Miller on
12/12/13 for $129,000
129 S 5th St. & C., St. Nicholas
Russian Eastern Orthodox Church to
Iglesia Misionera Eben-Ezer on
12/13/13 for $59,900
120 Wharton St., Bernadette R
Barnshaw to Russell C Parsons on
12/13/13 for $145,000
81 Bethel Rd., Clement Sloneski (Est.
by Exec.) to Bruce Boekenkamp on
12/16/13 for $28,000
4 City Park Dr., Millville Development
Corp. to Myra Wightman on 12/16/13
for $65,000
213 Morias Ave., Lylene G Terry to
American Modular LLC on 12/17/13 for
$25,000
2204 E Oak Dr., Lauren E Price to
Ethel Daugherty on 12/18/13 for
$138,000
25 Emily Dr., Sean Patrick McCarron
to Frederick K Schade on 12/18/13 for
$180,000
16 Ettie Dr., Wayne Bracco, Jr. to
Kirkland W Hinds on 12/18/13 for
$200,000
840 Shewchenko Ave., Wayne A
Shelton to Ethan M Graff on 12/18/13
for $280,000
STOW CREEK TWP
881 Columbia Hwy., Mark A Chambers
to Reyes M Carrero on 12/18/13 for
$229,000
UPPER DEERFIELD
44 Button Mill Rd., Kenneth V Leyman
to Adam P Rocap on 12/17/13 for
$194,500
VINELAND
1243 Sheridan Ave., Tina Grycenkov
(Exec.) to Diane Warren on 12/12/13
for $140,000
3413 Venturi Ln., NVR Inc. (DBA) to
Jose Boneta on 12/12/13 for $274,015
23 Northwood Dr., Bernard Bress to
Edward G Souders on 12/13/13 for
$155,000
441 Rainbow Ln., Thomas J Levari to
Ivelisse Rosado on 12/16/13 for
$143,000
1890 Hubbard Ln., Wayne E Hubbard
(Exec.) to Daniel A Mathie on 12/16/13
for $155,000
806 Broadway, Bota Investments LLC
to Marvin Walker on 12/17/13 for
$155,000
1273 Samuel Dr., Tonilynn Donzola to
Richard Speigel on 12/18/13 for
$50,000
330 E Forest Grove Rd., Audrey C
McDermott (by Atty.) to Rafael A
Distasio on 12/18/13 for $65,000
1651 S Lincoln Ave., Andrea Pancheri
(Exec.) to Waca Investments LLC on
12/18/13 for $75,000
512 Mayfair St., Angel L Pagan to
Gilberto Roman on 12/18/13 for
$85,000
2098 S Orchard Rd., Santiago Morales
to Ana Forty on 12/18/13 for $140,000
367 W Oak Rd., Gary Jones to Jose I
Cruz, Jr. on 12/18/13 for $155,000
1770 Roosevelt Blvd., Helen M Ballurio
(Ind. Atty.) to William F Mlynarski on
12/18/13 for $157,500
1137 Woodcrest Dr., EJG Properties At
Woodcrest LLC to Terry Love on
12/18/13 for $213,000
3181 S Delsea Dr., Mr. Roberts Inc. (by
Rec.) to Louis Altobelli, Jr. on 12/18/13
for $277,500
n
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Grapevine 8-11 021914.qxd:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:10 PM Page 8
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Anthony Houser
Coldwell Banker Excel Realty
609-377-1572
Theresa Simonini
Coldwell Banker Excel Realty
609-364-2810
Barbara McMahon
Maturo Realty 609-247-2540
Renee Cheesman
Maturo Realty 856-466-3069
James Prospero
Maturo Realty 609-805-8873
Maria Larrain
Maturo Realty 856-207-4678
Stephanie Verderose
Exit Uptown Realty 609-774-7117
Julie Tamburro
Berkshire-Hathaway HomeServices
856-305-8583
Donald Sullivan
Berkshire-Hathaway HomeServices
609-805-8639
Rick Gullo
Berkshire-Hathaway HomeServices
856-981-3033
Larry J. DePalma
DePalma Realty LLC 856-364-6697
Marie K. Heer
Century 21 856-297-5064
Lynda L. Gazzara
Gazzara Real Estate 609-501-4872
Eric Macon
Maturo Realty 609-774-0170
Michele Kelly
Kelly Real Estate
856-457-2830
Roger Pearce
Pearce-Jannarone Real Estate
856-207-3515
W. Scott Sheppard
RE/Max Realty Group 856-207-9393
Barbara Rosenthal
RE/Max Realty Group 609-364-6138
April Puesi
Coldwell Banker Excel Realty
856-392-1523
Susanna Philippoussis
Realtor of the Year
2014 President, CC Board of Realtors
Maturo Realty, Inc. 856-979-1116
2013 NJAR Circle of Excellence Award Winners
Grapevine 8-11 021914.qxd:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:10 PM Page 9
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NEWAddress: 46 NWest Ave, Vineland, NJ
Between PlumSt and RailroadTrack
(located in the Rental City Building)
St. Mary School 2nd Quarter Honors
Grade 5
Principals List: Kascianna Corona, Kaitlin Henry, Alaina Merighi,
Joseph Perna
First Honors: Emma Battersby, Patrick Coyle, Declan Davis
Second Honors: Jack Kruger, David Kuhar, Gabriella Prato,
Samantha Rodriguez
Grade 6
Principals List: Madeline Fawcett, Tabitha Gentiletti, Ankit Kapadia
First Honors: Emma Barbera, Nina Capra, Augustine Lam, Nicolette
Merlino, Gabrielle Sangataldo, Cole Powers
Second Honors: Cole Bennett, Chiara Dawkins, Logan Jaep, Timothy
Jalowitz, Shivam Sachdeva
Grade 7
Principals List: Alex Bisignaro, Katie Dalponte
First Honors: Annalise Barrett, Isabella Bispo, Trevor Fawcett, Taylor
Mathis, Rory McDermott, Mikaela Szamreta
Second Honors: Jacob Battersby, Chad Bertonazzi, Amelia Brago,
Matthew Dortu, Tim Merighi, Daniel Merighi, Rucha
Shah, Megan Sutter
Grade 8
Principals List: Paul Biagi
First Honors: Allison Capra, Luke Henry, Daniel Kuhar
Second Honors: Carina Barse, Sarah Buckley, Rajdaman Mander,
Juliehan Nguyen
Grapevine 8-11 021914.qxd:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:10 PM Page 10
HOW TO ENTER:
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PRIZEWEEK 021514
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1. Solve the puzzle just as you would in
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spaces have been filled in.
2. There is no limit to the number of times
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3. Anyone is eligible to enter except
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4. A basic prize of $50.00 will be awarded
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Visit www.SouthJerseyFCU.com for list
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Andrea Trattoria, 16 N. High St., Millville,
697-8400. Chef/owner Andrea Covino
serves up 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.
Bagel University, 1406 S. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 691-0909. Breakfast and lunch
spot offering sandwiches named for col-
leges near and far.
Bains Deli, 636 E. Landis Ave., Vineland,
563-1400. Fresh deli sandwiches, wraps,
healthy salads, and coffee drinks. Open
Monday-Saturday, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m.
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. 3 p.m.-7 p.m., Sun-Thu 10 p.m.-close.
All TV sports packages available.
Big Johns Pizza Queen, 1383 S. Main Rd.,
Vineland, 205-0012. Featuring Gutbuster
a 21-oz. burger, pizza, wings, subs, dinners.
Black Olive Restaurant. 782 S. Brewster Rd,
Vineland. 457-7624. 7 a.m. - 10 p.m daily.
Entrees, desserts. Take out available.
Bruni's Pizzeria. 2184 N. 2nd St., Millville
(856) 825-2200. Award-winning pizza since
1956. Open Mon-Sat. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Sun.
11 a.m.-9 p.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.
Chestnut Diner, 2578 E. Chestnut Ave.,
Vineland, 856-696-2992. Serving breakfast,
lunch, and dinner. Open daily 7 a.m.10 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 Burger Bar & Grill, W. Landis Ave.
and Rt. 55, Vineland, 696-8600. Open Daily,
6 a.m.11 p.m. Breakfast served all day.
Daily specials Monday through Friday.
Dakota Prime Steakhouse & Sushi Bar at
Ramada, W. Landis Ave. and Rt. 55,
Vineland, 692-8600. Stylish atmosphere
perfect for an upscale lunch or dinner.
Delicious steaks, seafood and sushi. 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. 3-7 p.m.
Open 24 hours. Kids eat free Tues. & Sat.
Dominicks Pizza, 1768 S. Lincoln Ave.,
Vineland, 691-5511. Family time-honored
recipes, fresh ingredients.
Double Eagle Saloon, 1477 Panther Rd.,
Vineland, 213-6176. Open for lunch and din-
ner. Traditional tavern fair.
Dukes Place, 305 N. Mill Rd., Vineland,
457-5922. Open for breakfast and lunch,
seven days. Homemade soups, burgers, hot
and cold subs. Catering available.
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.
Gardellas Ravioli Co. & Italian Deli,
527 S. Brewster Rd., 697-3509. Name says
it all. Daily specials, catering. Closed Sun.
Golden Corral Buffet & Grill, 3624 S. Delsea
Dr., 856-362-5508. All you can eat, serving
Breakfast Sat & Sun, 7:30 - 11 a.m., Lunch
Mon thru Fri 11 - 4 p.m., Dinner 7 days a
week. Senior early bird specials, Mon thru
Fri, 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. Take outs avail.
Ginas Ristorante, Landis and Lincoln Aves.
in ShopRite Plaza, Vineland. 205-0049.
Serving dinner Tues.-Sat., from 4 p.m.
Serving lunch: Tues. - Fri. 11 a.m. - 3 p.m.
Reservations recommended. Takeout avail.
Giovanni's Authentic Italian Deli, 1102 N.
East Ave. Vineland. 692-0459. Open daily
serving 10 hot and cold subs, breakfast
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691-4848
Fax: 856-691-2294
marcaccimeats@verizon.net
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any appetite. Call for hours.
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FREE VEIN SCREENING
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Throbbing, achy, tired legs?
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March 10th & 17th................Vineland
March 4th, 6th, 11th & 13th.....Voorhees
March 5th, 7th, 12th & 14th.....Sewell
sandwiches, salads, soups, sandwiches, flat
bread panini, wings, platters, family dinners.
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 restaurant
open for dinner Wed.-Sun. at 5 p.m.
Harrys Pub at Ramada, W. Landis Ave. and
Rt. 55, Vineland, 696-8600. Lunch & dinner
7 days a week. Happy hour daily 4-6pm
with half price appetizers. Live
Entertainment Wednesday thru Saturday.
Jersey Jerry's. 1362 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland,
362-5978. Serving subs, sandwiches, and
take-out platters.
Joe's Poultry. 440 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland,
692-8860. Barbecue and Kosher chickens,
homemade sides, catering.
Kura Thai & Sushi, 607 E. Landis Ave.,
Vineland, 213-6706. Open for lunch & dinner
daily. Authentic Thai dishes ranging from
traditional to modern recipes. Take out avail.
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, $6.49 lunch buffet Mon.-Sat.
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. Seasonal outdoor dining in the
adjacent Lunas Outdoor Bar & Grille.
Millville Queen Diner, 109 E. Broad Street,
Millville. 327-0900. Open 7 days 24 Hours.
Milmay Tavern, Tuckahoe and Bears Head
rds., Milmay, 476-3611. Gourmet lunches
and dinners, casual setting.
Moes Southwest Grill, 2188 N. 2nd St.,
Millville, 825-3525. Tex-Mex, burritos, catering.
MVP Bar, 408 Wheat Road, Vineland, 697-
9825. Full bar menu, drink specials.
Old Oar House Irish Pub, 123 N. High Street
Millville, 293-1200. Year round fresh seafood
daily, slow roasted prime rib specials, deli-
cious salads, everyday lunch & dinner spe-
cials, kitchen open until 1 a.m., 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.
Peking Gourmet, 907 N. Main Rd., (Larrys
II Plaza), Vineland, 691-0088. Chinese.
Takeout only. Major credit cards accepted.
The Rail, 1252 Harding Hwy., Richland, 697-
1440. Bar and restaurant with daily drink
specials and lunch specials.
Saigon, 2180 N. Second St., Millville, 327-
8878. Authentic Vietnamesenoodle soups,
curry, hotpot, Buddhist vegetarian.
A Taste of the Islands, 731 Landis Ave.,
Vineland, 691-9555. First prize winning BBQ
Ribs, Jamaican Jerk chicken, Curry chicken,
seafood, rice and beans and much more.
Closed Sunday only.
Ten22 Bar & Grill at Centerton Country
Club, 1022 Almond Rd., Pittsgrove, 358-
3325. Lunch and dinner. Tavern menu fea-
tures soups, salads, burgers, sandwiches,
wraps and entree selections. Sunday
Brunch extravaganza.
Tombstone Saloon and Grill, 373 Route 54,
Buena, 213-6115. Serving lunch, dinner and
packaged goods. Tuesday night: trivia and
Taco Tuesday buffet; Wednesday: wing night
with 50 cent wings and free poker. Teachers
happy hour TuesdayFriday, 46 p.m.half-
price appetizers and drink specials.
Tre Bellezze, 3363 Wheat Rd., Vineland,
697-8500. Tues: $1 tacos, $5 margaritas,
Wed: ladies night, $3.50 mixed drinks,
karaoke 710, free pool table 79 and 50
wings, Sat: breakfast 811am
Uncle Rickys Outdoor Bar, 470 E. Wheat
Rd., Vineland, 691-4454. Ribs, chicken, fish,
steaks. Always clams, eat in or take out.
Live music Saturday & Sunday night.
Dungeness Crab All You Can Eat.
Villa Fazzolari, 821 Harding Hwy., Buena
Vista, 697-7107. Dinner combos, grilled
meats, fish. Lunch and dinner daily.
Winfields. 106 N. High St., Millville, 327-
0909. Continental cuisine and spirits
served in a casually upscale setting.
Ye Olde Centerton Inn, 1136 Almond Rd.,
Pittsgrove, 358-3201. American classics
served in a picturesque setting.
For a no-obligation
advertising consultation,
call 856-457-7815 or e-mail:
sales@grapevinenewspaper.com today.
Advertise in
The
Grapevine
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Grapevine
and get
incredible
results.
n
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CenterForDiagnosticImaging.com
Shailendra Desai, M.D. NPI 1073553152
NJ State License 25MA04122300
Ernesto Go, M.D. NPI 1265489207
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856.794.1700
VINELAND
1450 E. Chestnut Ave.
Bldg 4, Suite A
Bigger is Better!
Our new MRI combines high quality
imaging with an ultra wide bore.
More comfortable for large patients and claustrophobic patients.
L
ast week, I inaugurated a new
series a columns called Did You
Know which focuses on
downtown businesses you may
see every day, but about which you dont
know the inside storythe unique services
they offer, the way they add to our down-
town. I started with Als Shoes and, this
week, I continue with Hernandos
Hometown Pharmacy, at 741 E. Landis
Ave., Unit A. Ill let owner Hernando
Perez continue:
Downtown Vineland has had a rich his-
tory of local pharmaciesWinslows
Pharmacy, Varsity Pharmacy, Sun-Ray
Drugs, the Pierson-Morris Drug Store, and
others. Each gave its customers the kind of
personalized attention that came from get-
ting to know the customers individually. To
have such a pharmacy of my own was my
dream that was realized when I opened
Hernandos Hometown Pharmacy in 2012.
I came to this country from Puerto Rico in
1972. After working at Thrift Drug, then at
Acme for 14 years and Shop Rite for four
years, my own entrepreneurial drive was
awakened by a friend in the business who
inspired me to go out on my own. He said
that I would be more in control and have a
bigger impact on the community. The experi-
ence has made me more of a public person
and has inspired me to do more public things.
My business is a full-service pharmacy
including pharmaceuticals, vitamins, and
diabetic supplies, as well as other products. I
also offer prescription service and custom
compounding. All major insurances and
workmans compensation are accepted and
prices are competitive with major pharmacy
pricing plans. This is in addition to free local
delivery and house calls I make to help cus-
tomers with their medications. We also fea-
ture free in-home drug counseling. This is
another aspect of the personal touch I put
into my business to combine the human and
business element. For those with diabetes,
we are now offering free glucometers. My
wife Kimberley is a registered nurse and
helps out at the business part-time.
We are part of the Good Neighbor
Pharmacy program, which privately-owned
pharmacies can join. This program supplies
the store-brand items and publishes Health
Connection, which contains health-related
articles and money-saving coupon promo-
tions.
My aim at Hernandos Hometown
Pharmacy is to treat everyone as a person,
not a number. I try to use my customers
connections and interests to know them,
whether it is to speak to them in Spanish or
to relate to their hobbies and interests. I
keep a section of baseball memorabilia in
the store for my customers who are baseball
fans and I also have on display pharmaceu-
tical memorabilia.
In the future, I want to service group and
nursing homes, as well as clinics and to keep
using my business to put more back into the
community. I am also exploring the expan-
sion of my line of hair products. I already
stock Hispanic hair products, including
Maja skin care products and toiletries.
We are open weekdays from 9 a.m. to 6
p.m. and Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. For
more information, stop in or call us at (856)
691-DRUG (3784). Hernando Perez I
For more information on Main Street
Vineland, call 856-794-8653, visit
www.mainstreetvineland. org, or check
them out on Facebook.
Did You Know...
Hometown
Pharmacy
The second installment of a new series of columns
to familiarize you with downtown businesses.
I
Downtown Vineland { BY GARY HOLLOWAY,
EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR, VDID / MAINSTREET VINELAND }
TELL EMYOU SAWIT INTHE GRAPEVINE!
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 know that you saw
their ads in The Grapevine.
For advertising info, call 856-457-7815
Grapevine 12-16 021914.qxd:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:11 PM Page 14
Certified, Insured & Bonded
10%
DISCOUNT FOR
NEW CLIENTS
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Bud Sulzman
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Check Your House Daily
Take In Your Mail
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Fido and Friends Animal
Assisted Therapy Group
Fido & Friends Assisted Therapy
Group was born in April of 2012!
The mission is to provide adults and
children with happiness. They promote
confidence and self-esteem through class-
room education and reading programs.
They provide hope to those in nursing
homes and rehabilitation centers who
look forward to the visits. If a speedy
recovery is a side effect, then so be it! In
some cases, patients have only a visit from
the dogs and their handlers to look for-
ward to. The dogs are an excellent ice-
breaker and we have had some astonish-
ing results.
Fido & Friends participates in reading
programs in local schools and libraries,
attends family nights at schools, does edu-
cational classroom presentations and vis-
its at rehabilitation centers and nursing
homes.
As one of the few organized therapy
dog groups in southern New Jersey, they
offer a variety of member services. They
handle the red tape of setting up new vis-
its according to the facilities guidelines,
gathering members paperwork to be dis-
tributed to the proper contacts at facilities
and schools. They schedule the visits so
that members have many different venues
to choose from. They also offer orienta-
tion classes, mentoring, training and certi-
fication classes with Bright & Beautiful
Therapy Dogs, Inc. and AKC Canine Good
Citizen evaluations.
Members are evaluated before mem-
bership is approved and have three
months to complete the mentoring, train-
ing and certification process. Not all dogs
or handlers are cut out for therapy work,
thus the allowed time to train and experi-
ence different venues.
Fido & Friends is a new group with
many years of experience behind it. They
look forward to hearing from new facili-
ties and meeting new friends!
For information, contact them at 856-
313-2172 or email at
allcritterssitting@yahoo.com. Their infor-
mational website can be found at
http://allcritterssitting.wix.com/fid-
ofriendsthergroup. I
PET
CARE
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HAPPENINGS
EVERY TUESDAY
Overeaters Anonymous. Cumberland
County Community Church, 1800 E.
Broad St., Millville. 8 - 9 p.m. Free. A 12-
Step Program for anyone with compulsive
food behaviors. 609-805-2548.
EVERY WEDNESDAY
Homework Help. Millville Public Library,
210 Buck St., Millville. 56:30 p.m. 856-
825-7087, ext. 14.
Hallelujah Lifestyle Workshop.
Creating Health LLC, 4 LaSalle Dr.,
Vineland. Call for details: 609-774-4288.
EVERY THURSDAY
Seasonal Craft Classes. Mels Amish
Connection, 6953 Harding Hwy., Mizpah.
6:45 p.m. Projects range from $8 to $25.
Seasonal wreaths, kissing balls, swags,
baskets. Limited class size; registration
required at 856-305-6364.
Meet & Greet. Creating Health LLC,
4 LaSalle Dr., Vineland. 7 p.m. Free.
Health-conscious people will share
favorite recipes for using essential oils in
food, healing and everyday use. You may
bring your favorite recipe, if you choose.
Register at 856-293-0355.
Yoga Classes. Caf of Life Fitness
Center, 1 N. Valley Ave., Vineland. 7 p.m.
$8 per class. 856-794-9888. Addressed to
the Hispanic community and people with
special needs. 882-8929.
EVERY THIRD THURSDAY
Class: Basic Flameworking Glass.
Carlisle School of Glass Art, 412 S. Wade
Blvd., Bldg. #7, Millville. 68 p.m. $50.
Learn how to operate Mini CC torch and
create a bead with soft glass. To enroll:
856-825-0627.
EVERY SATURDAY
ReStore Seeking Donations. Habitat
for Humanity ReStore, 601 S. Delsea Dr.,
Vineland. 8 a.m.noon. 856-563-0292 or
visit www.facebook.com/CCHFHRestore.
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 19
iPhone & iPad Class. Paula J. Ring
Education Center, 10 Buck St., Millville.
79 p.m. $20. Cumberland County
College offering this beginners class. To
register, call 856-776-2372.
Seniors Singles Meet. St. Padre Pio
Parish Rosary Hall, 4680 Dante Ave.,
Vineland. 7 p.m. 610-510-4737.
FEBRUARY 20 AND 21
AARP Safe Driving Program. Inspira
Medical Center, 501 W. Front St., Elmer. 9
a.m.noon. $15 for AARP members, $20
for non-members. Participants must
attend both classes to receive certificate
for insurance discount and reduction of
violation points on NJ drivers licenses. To
register, call 1-800-INSPIRA.
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 20
Mens Health Awareness. Running Deer
Golf Club, 1111 Parvins Mill Rd., Pittsgrove.
6 p.m. What Women Notice, hosted by
Inspira Health Networks Spirit of Women
group. Addresses mens health issues and
changes women may notice in their part-
ners. Presenter: Dr. Sanjay S. Katsuri, M.D.
Space limited; register at 1-800-INSPIRA.
HR Association Monthly Gathering.
Cumberland County College Luciano Center,
3322 College Dr., Vineland. 5:30 p.m.; din-
ner meeting 6:30 p.m. $45; reserve ASAP
at hrasnj.shrm.org. Human Resource
Association of Southern NJ. Speaker:
Armers Moncure, VP with Cook Ross, Inc.
Homelessness Open Forum. Bethany
Grace Community Church, 31 N. Pear St.,
Bridgeton. 6:30 p.m. Open forum on Code
Blue initiative. www.cityofbridgeton.com.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21
Free Spa Night. Hosted by Foundation
for Wellness Professionals. 1419 S. Delsea
Dr., Vineland. Free and open to all. Facials,
paraffin dips, massages, foot baths, and
manicures. To RSVP, call 856-692-2521.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22
Super 50/50. Our Lady of Mercy
Academy, Carew Hall, 1001 Main Rd.,
Newfield, NJ. $100 for tickets. Grand prize
is $10,000; 10 other prizes total $20,000.
For more info., call 856-697-2008.
OLMA New Student Registration. Our
Lady of Mercy Academy, 1001 Main Rd.,
Newfield. 9:30 a.m. 856-697-2008.
Flapjack Fundraiser. Cumberland Mall
Applebees, 3849 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland.
810 a.m. $6. Proceeds benefit Dane
Barse and Max Leuchter Elementary
Schools field trips. 856-794-6922.
Dr. Perkus Health & Wellness.
Creating Health LLC, 4 LaSalle Dr.,
Vineland. 11 a.m.9 p.m. Alternative health
and wellness information for parents,
teachers, professionals. Four topics in four
sessions. $55 in advance, $85 at door.
Call for details: 856-293-0355.
Chocolate Lovers Party. Millville
Womans Club, 300 E St., Millville. 1
p.m. $12. Cupcakes, cookies, cakes, can-
dies, and a chocolate fountain. RSVP 856-
447-4478 or 856-293-1570.
Take-out Soup Sale. Trinity Episcopal
Church, 800 Wood St., Vineland. 11 a.m.4
p.m. $4 a pint, $6 a quart. A variety of
soups to choose from. 856-691-1589.
15th Annual Venison and Ham
Dinner. Friendship Methodist Church, 149
Friendship Rd., Monroeville. Seatings at 3,
4, and 5 p.m. $13 adults and takeouts; $6
for children under 12. Takeouts 3:305:30
p.m. Family style, all you can eat dinner.
Profits benefit Salem County Habitat for
Humanity and Hurricane Sandy relief.
Reserve ASAP by calling 856-358-3920.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23
Annual Fellowship Service. New Bethel
AME Church, 414 N. 7th St., Vineland.
3:30 p.m. with St. Johns AME Zion
Church in Mizpah. Guest preacher is Rev.
Rozier. 856-691-1349.
Late Winter Yoga Session. Inspira
Health Network Fitness Connection,
Orchard Rd. and Sherman Ave., Vineland.
Six-week session beginning 2/23. 10 a.m.;
Prenatal 11:30 a.m., 2/24 6:30 p.m. and
2/25 6:30 p.m. Classes suitable for most
fitness levels. Six classes $46; $36 for
members. 856-696-3924 or register at
front desk. Instructor is Linda Schimmel.
Blini (Russian Pancakes). Holy Trinity
Russian Orthodox Church, 2211 W. Landis
Ave., Vineland. 15 p.m. $15. 856-825-8951.
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 25
Heart Risk Assessment Event. Hampton
Inn and Suites, 2134 W. Landis Ave.,
Vineland. 68 p.m. Free, seating limited;
registration required. Heart-healthy dinner,
seminar and info on heart health. Free heart
risk assessment and Q&A with Andrew Zinn,
M.D. To register, call 1-800-INSPIRA.
SAVE THE DATES
Saturday, March 1: Carnevale
Dinner Dance. Hosted by The Italian
Cultural Foundation of South Jersey.
Greenview Inn at Eastlyn, 4049
Italia Ave., Vineland. Live music by
Idea 71 from Philadelphia. Tickets
$55; $25 for kids 6 to 11; free for
under 6. For tickets, call 609-805-
3757. Payment needed at least one
week before event.
Saturday, March 22: Dandelion
Dinner and Beer Tasting. Hosted by
Greater Vineland Chamber of
Commerce. Merighis Savoy Inn,
4940 E. Landis Ave., Vineland. 6 p.m.
Tickets $50. Celebrate our agricul-
tural community. Fun, food, beer
tasting, dancing, photo booth, and
dandelions! Music provided by DJ
Bob Morgan. To purchase tickets,
call 856-691-7400 by March 7. Pay
online at www.vinelandchamber.org.
COMMUNITY CALENDAR
SATURDAY, MARCH 8
The Merighi Family Decades Ball.
Merighi's Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave. and
Union Rd., Vineland, 691-8051. 7 p.m.
Commemorating the 60th Anniversary
of Merighis Savoy Inn. Dinner, dancing,
and cocktails. $100 per person.
Proceeds benefit The Rotary Club of
Vineland, YMCA of Vineland, and
Inspira Hospice.
Grapevine 17-21 021914:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:23 PM Page 34
Wheat Rd., Vineland. Complimentary buffet
3-6 p.m. 697-8500.
Gene Cortopassi. Merighi's Savoy Inn, E.
Landis Ave. and Union Rd., Vineland, 691-
8051. 6 p.m. Dinner music.
EVERY FRIDAY AND SATURDAY
Top 40 Dance Party. The Cosmopolitan.
3513 S. Delsea Dr., Vineland. Fri.: DJ Slick
Rick. Sat.: DJ Tony Morris. All of the most
popular mainstream dance music. 765-5977.
EVERY SATURDAY
Back in the Day Dance Party. Villa
Fazzolari, 821 Harding Hwy. (Rt. 40), Buena.
856-697-7101. 7 p.m.midnight. Five hours
nonstop dance music from 1970s and 80s.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21
David Bromberg Quintet. Levoy
Theatre, 126-130 N. High St., Millville. 8
p.m. Tickets $32$39,. Call 856-327-6400
or visit www.levoy.net.
Third Friday: Book Signing / The
Troubadour KP. Bogarts Bookstore. 210
N. High St., Millville. Free. Book signing
with Raymond Lombardo, More Like
Brothers ($16.99 paperback) 5 p.m./Live
music. 7 p.m.
FEBRUARY 21 AND 22
The Vagina Monologues. Eagle Theatre,
208 Vine St., Hammonton. 8 p.m. Each
year, the Eagle Theatre joins millions
around the world to mark V-Day, a move-
ment aimed at ending violence against
women. The performance is a critical
piece of the efforts to raise awareness
about this issue. The play, written by Eve
Ensler in 1996, is an episodic play based
on numerous interviews Ensler conducted
with women from all around the globe.
Tickets $20. Proceeds will benefit The
South Jersey Women's Center. 609-704-
5012 or www.theeagletheatre.com.
SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 22
Real Imposters. Red, Hot and Blue, 2175
New Jersey Rt. 70, Cherry Hill. 8 p.m. The
band features April Chimes, Greg Potter,
Ed McCaffrey, Chris Cristino, Tony Monzo,
and Bob Sworaski.
Dinner and a Show. Minotola United
Methodist Church, 905 Central Ave.,
Minotola. 6 p.m. Dinner will include sever-
al kinds of baked ziti. Musical review fea-
turing songs from the early 1900s through
the 1970s will be presented by LeGrande
Music Academy, free of charge. Advance
dinner tickets are required, $10; may be
purchased by calling 856-697-4246 or
856-875-7548. Snow date for the dinner
and show is Saturday, March 1.
Clan Suibhne. Bogarts Bookstore. 210 N.
High St., Millville. Free. Acoustic Yank-Irish
Celtic Roots Music. 79 p.m.
SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 23
Maurice River Music Salon Concert:
Classically Black. A residence in the
Mauricetown, NJ area. 2:30 p.m. Renowned
pianist Richard Alston presents a program
of music by European and American com-
posers of African descent. Seating is very
limited, so reservations are required.
Donations to assist in covering expenses
accepted. To reserve seats, get directions,
or receive more information: 856-506-
0580 or www.mauricerivermusic.com.
FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 28
Laughing with the Locals Comedy
Show. Merighi's Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave.
and Union Rd., Vineland, 691-8051. 7 p.m.
Hosted by Mike KC. Co-headliners: Mike
Eagan and Eric Potts. Cash bar and snack
menu. Must be 21 or over. Tickets $20.
SATURDAY, MARCH 1
Oldies Dance Featuring Jerry Blavat.
Our Lady of Pompeii Rosary Hall,
Cornucopia and Dante Aves., Vineland. 7
p.m.midnight. St. Padre Pio Parish hosts
an oldies dance featuring Jerry Blavat,
The Geator with the Heater. Doors open
6:30 p.m. Tickets $40 per person and
include a buffet dinner, beer, dessert and
coffee. BYOB. For tickets or more informa-
tion, call 856-691-7526.
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Greater Vineland Chamber of Commerce
41
st
Annual Dandelion Dinner
& Beer Tasting
Its Dandelion time in Cumberland County!
The Greater Vineland Chamber of Commerce hosts a community celebration announcing
the beginning of our agricultural season with an evening of dinner and dancing!
Saturday, March 22, 2014 6 PM
Merighis Savoy Inn
Landis Ave. & Union Rd., Vineland
DANCE MUSIC BY DJ BOB MORGAN ENTERTAINMENT!
Ticket price includes craft brew tasting in your own
take-home commemorative pilsner glass.
New this year: Complimentary photo booth
guests can take pictures to remember the event!
Advertisements are available in the program book:
half page $50, full page $75. Deadline is March 13th.
Tickets are $50 advance purchase and are limited,
so reserve early and come join in the fun! For tickets
or further information, call the Chamber office at
(856) 691-7400 or visit www.vinelandchamber.org.
The Dandelion Dinner is sponsored by:
Beer Tasting Sponsor:
ShopRite Wines & Spirits
Root Sponsor:
Compassionate Care Hospice
FRIDAY, MARCH 14
6th Annual Hometown Heroes Gala.
Merighi's Savoy Inn, E. Landis Ave. and
Union Rd., Vineland, 691-8051. 6 p.m.
Join The Grapevine in celebrating this
years 24 honorees.
DJ/Dancing Buffet Dinner Cash
Bar Silent Auction 50/50 Raffle.
Proceeds go to the Rotary Club of
Vineland Charities Foundation and The
Cumberland Cape Atlantic YMCA.
Tickets are $70 each, $130 per couple,
seating of eight to 10 per table avail-
able. Tickets can be purchased at The
Grapevine office across the parking
lot from Larrys II Restaurant & Caf,
907 N. Main Road in Vineland or by
calling 856-457-7815.
Grapevine 17-21 021914:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:23 PM Page 35
W
ell, the mayor didnt hang up on
me, but he kept me waiting for
half an hour. When he did
arrive (and he had a perfectly
good explanation) the first thing I said was, Its
never a good idea to keep the press waiting.
Referring to myself as the press was a
little bit of a stretch on my part.
What youre going to get here isnt a news
story, but then again, what youre getting
many times in the local papers regarding
Vineland Mayor Ruben Bermudez arent real-
ly news stories either.
First a little history: When I started the
Cumberland News in 1988, Bermudez was my
first landlord, renting me a little office next to
his Landis Avenue tuxedo shop.
It was a handshake deal and he let me rent
on a monthly basis. Within a short time, we
had outgrown the space and he let me leave
with no penalties and his best wishes for con-
tinued success.
Years later, I had retired and he was serv-
ing as city council president.
One day he called to ask my opinion about
his running for mayor. The conversation
turned into a job as his campaign manager.
That was 2004. We ran a good, honest cam-
paign and got buried by the Barse steam-
roller, which didnt do the same (someday Ill
write chapter and verse on that).
Eight years later I got another request to
run a campaign, this one from Doug Albrecht,
a sitting Vineland councilman who wanted to
be mayor. After meeting with Doug (and
knowing the other candidates), I joined his
campaign team. This time we got steamrolled
by Barse, Bermudez and Romano. But I still
think Albrecht was the best candidate and
would have made the best mayor.
But the people thought otherwise and,
against long odds, Ruben Bermudez became
Vinelands first Hispanic mayor.
Skip to today: The Mayor and I sat down
for lunch and discussed a wide range of top-
ics covering just about everything from his
appointments (Business Administrator
William Lutz and City Solicitor Rick Tonetta)
to his disappointments (his disagreements
with council, the recall campaign and his
treatment by the local daily newspaper).
Like I said, this isnt a news story and you
can listen to our conversation for yourself at
www.grapevinenewspaper.com/blog.
But its that treatment by the media part
that has brought me out of retirement.
Im a newspaper junkie.
Always have been. Always will be.
When I first came here as the executive
editor of Times-Graphics I had to do a lot of
speaking engagements at Rotary, Kiwanis, the
Womans Club, etc.
The question that always came up was,
What is the paper going to be like? My stan-
dard response than was: Better. Over the
years my response has, in fact, gotten better.
If you asked me that today, Id say, People
have a right to expect to believe everything
that they read in a news story.
Now, I dont know if the Mayor was right
or wrong about his appointments, but I have
my opinions (the jurys still out on Lutz and
shame on Tonetta for not stepping down when
asked). And I dont know if hes right or wrong
about his disappointmentsthe council, the
recall petition and his treatment by the media.
But I do have some opinions:
Councilthree of the five council mem-
bers originally ran as part of the Barse team
and, according to the Mayor, when they
joined his slate they agreed to put personal
agendas aside and work together for the city.
Now, its pretty obviousto me, at leastthat
council hasnt done that. But I think the Mayor
is going to find a way to get everyone moving
in a positive direction. There are just too many
good people on that council for them not to.
The Recall Petition: Really. Isnt it amaz-
ing that it started right after the Mayor rein-
troduced the request for a forensic audit of
the whole Landis Theater mess.
The statement on the petition says the
Mayor has shown incompetence in the per-
formance of his duties, which has had an
adverse effect upon the city and citizens of
Vineland. At the time of the filing, hed been
Mayor for less than a year. Rome, as they say,
wasnt built in a day.
The recall drive is a slap in the face to
everyone who voted (regardless of whom
they voted for) in the last election.
Treatment by the media: As a former
newsman, I can tell you hes just not getting a
fair shakeby the local daily paper specifically.
For example: That front-page editors note
about the conversation between the Daily
Journals managing editor and the mayor. The
Mayor has been in the service business for 40
years. Ask anyone who has dealt with him on
a professional level if he knows how to con-
duct himself. Nuf said.
Another example would be the article they
published about the Mayors memo to city
employees regarding leaking things to the press.
The article immediately acknowledges that
the Mayor acted within his rights, but the
whole rest of the story makes it sound as if he
were doing something wrong. Even and this
was childish on their partrunning the gram-
matical errors in his message. Shame on them.
The mayor is fluent in two languages. That
newspaper isnt being fair in one.
Listen to the interview at www.grapevine-
newspaper.com/blog and judge for yourself. I
The views and opinions expressed in the column
are those of the author and do not necessarily
reflect the views of The Grapevine or its employ-
ees. Readers are invited to provide feedback via
e-mail: paul@grapevinenewspaper.com.
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Does and Donts { BY PAUL J. DOE, FORMER EDITOR, CUMBERLAND NEWS }
An Interview with
Mayor Bermudez
To listen to Paul Does inter-
view with Vineland Mayor
Ruben Bermudez, visit
www.grapevinenewspaper.com/blog
Bermudez: Romano is Behind the Recall
Vineland Mayor Ruben Bermudez
declared that the man he unseated is the
force behind the recall campaign to remove
him from office. He named Robert Romano,
whom Bermudez defeated in the 2012
municipal election, as the person whos
behind this.
The previous mayor got involved and I
think its wrong because the people voted
him out of office, Bermudez said during a
half-hour interview with Paul Doe of The
Grapevine last Tuesday.
Bermudez, the citys first Hispanic chief
executive, said he thought Romano was
going against the system, in orchestrating
the recall drive. He said when a mayor is
elected, you give him respect for four years,
as he said he did with his predecessor.
Romano, who served from 2009-2012,
denied being behind the recall effort, but
said he is gathering signatures.
Its not true, he said on Monday.
Come on, it doesnt make sense that one
person could orchestrate getting almost
10,000 signatures, whether its me or any-
one else. Its ridiculous and outrageous.
Recall petitions were taken out in
November and that number of signatures
would be needed by May to compel a special
election where voters would give an up or
down on Bermudez and cast a vote for a
replacement. Romano and several others have
announced their intention to run. The commit-
tee has publicly claimed to have more than
4,000 signatures now. Mickey Brandt
Grapevine 22-24 021914.qxd:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:18 PM Page 22
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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
Check if needed.
Refer to prices above.
JBold
J Border
CLASSIFIEDS
Credit Cards
Accepted:
2 acres of Farmland
in Rosenhayn available
for use. Maintenance
of grounds required in
lieu of rental fee. Call
856-982-0300.
We Buy
Used Vehicles!
See Lenny Campbell See Merle Graham
808 N. Pearl St., Bridgeton NJ
(856) 451-0095
Give the gift of a smoke-free NewYear
No Butts-Smoking Alternative
feel like you are smoking...without smoking
Find out how
Bonnie Martin
Consultant
electronic cigarettes and
personal vaporizers
1059 Linda Lane
Vineland NJ 08360
856-466-7695
bmartin1026@aol.com
Call Free 1-855-340-7179
www.OmahaSteaks.com/mbfvc70
4 FREE Omaha Steaks Burgers
Limit of 2 packages & 4 FREE burgers per address.
Standard S&H will be applied. Free Burgers must ship
with orders of $39 or more. Offer expires 11/15/13.
2013 OCG | 15602 | Omaha Steaks, Inc.
The Family Value Combo
2 (5 oz.) Filet Mignons
2 (5 oz.) Top Sirloins
4 Boneless Chicken Breasts (1 lb. pkg.)
4 (4 oz.) Omaha Steaks Burgers
4 (3 oz.) Gourmet Jumbo Franks
4 Stuffed Baked Potatoes
48829VSK List $154.00, Now Only . . .
$
39
99
CALL US FOR A FREE QUOTE
717-495-5708
www.NewPoleBarn.com
We Will Beat
Anyones
Prices
Turk's Pressure Clean.
Powerwashing of vinyl and
aluminum siding.
Concrete, brick, roof stain
removal. Gutter cleanouts.
Over 25 years in business.
Insured. Call 856-692-7470
Phone Hub will pay CASH
for your new/broken/used
iPhone! 2630 E. Chestnut
Ave., Unit D, Vineland, NJ
08361. Call or text
856-332-9078.
Rental Country services
all brands of power equip-
ment, regardless of where
they were purchased.
Heaters , snow blowers,
Bobcats available for cold
weather and snow
removal. Honda snow-
blowers / Stihl chainsaws
in stock now.
856-692-7510
Beautiful truck, freshly
painted, 1987 GMC Sierra
350 short bed 4x2 -
power windows, power
locks, air, many new
parts, $12,000. Call
856-696-0053.
Ask for Olin.
DISH TV Retailer. Starting
at $19.99/month (for 12
mos.) & High Speed
Internet starting at
$14.95/month (where
available.) SAVE! Ask
About SAME DAY
Installation! CALL Now!
1-800-816-7254
Medical Guardian - Top-
rated medical alarm and
24/7 medical alert moni-
toring. For a limited time,
get free equipment, no
activation fees, no com-
mitment, a 2nd waterproof
alert button for free and
more - only $29.95 per
month. 800-918-1743
Micro Electric LLC.
Residential repair, addi-
tions, and services.
Bonded and insured.
no job is too small.
NJ LIC #14256.
Call 609-501-7777.
House for rent: 3 bed-
rooms, A/C, gas heat,
kitchen, dishwasher, 1
bath, living room, dining
room, washer/dryer
hookup, enclosed porch,
lake front view, Vineland
area. Call 856-692-3646.
For rent: Upstairs apart-
ment. West Vineland,
Sunset Avenue. Two bed-
room. $1200/mo. Includes
heat and electric. No pets.
Call 856-794-1623
Home FSBO. W. Wheat
Rd. Handyman's Special.
Great location.
2br/1ba/full basement. 1+
acres. Asking $80,000.
Call 856-896-8501. Also:
2br/2ba big brick home
for sale by library. Great
neighborhood. Full fin-
ished basement, private
entrance. Se Vende Casa.
Large brick home FSBO by
Vineland library. 3 bed-
rooms, 2 baths plus fire-
place, porch, large living
room, many amenities.
856-896-8501.
For Sale: Snowblower
Craftsman, 5hp, 22 inch,
electric starter. Variable
speeds including reverse.
Good condition. $275.
856-696-0708.
House to share in
Vineland: Near stores,
cable TV, shared bathroom
and kitchen. $450/mo.
Prefer a Christian.
References required. Call
856-982-5890
Available in March:
Vineland 2-bedroom, 1-
bath, basement, large
yard. No pets, no smoking.
$1,200/month, 1.5 months
security. Good neighbor-
hood.
shrental521@yahoo.com.
Electrical
Contractor
For Rent
Services
Services
Misc.
Farmland Avail.
Share a Nice Big
Modern House in a
Great Neighborhood.
$699 a month. Call
609-213-0832.
Like New Rototiller. Paid
$500, will take $200.
Used once. Call 856-507-
1168, leave message.
1. ____________ 2. ____________ 3. ____________ 4. ___________ 5. ____________
6. ____________ 7. ____________ 8. ____________ 9. ___________ 10. ____________
11. ____________ 12. ____________ 13. ____________ 14. ___________ 15. ____________
16. ____________ 17. ____________ 18. ____________ 19. ___________ 20. ____________
21. ____________ 22. ____________ 23. ____________ 24. ___________ 25. ____________
26. ____________ 27. ____________ 28. ____________ 29. ___________ 30. ____________
31. ____________ 32. ____________ 33. ____________ 34. ___________ 35. ____________
36. ____________ 37. ____________ 38. ____________ 39. ___________ 40. ____________
41. ____________ 42. ____________ 43. ____________ 44. ___________ 45. ____________
46. ____________ 47. ____________ 48. ____________ 49. ___________ 50. ____________
Steelman's Drywall.
Drywall installation and
repairing nailpops, cracks,
water damage, unfinished
drywall. Big or small! Call
Joe for a free estimate at
609-381-3814.
Pete Construction.
Specializing in decks,
roofs and home
remodeling. State
licensed and insured.
Call for a free esti-
mate. 856-507-1456.
Honest, reliable house &
office cleaning. Please call
Katie at 856-238-3164.
Piano lessons in my
home. 30 years experi-
ence teaching. Taking
beginners 5 years old and
up. Please call Ana
856-794-8977.
Mountain Air & Heat, LLC.
24-hour emergency serv-
ice - full service heating
and air contractor. Call
about our annual service
agreement and receive
your FREE Honeywell digi-
tal thermostat and 15% off
parts with every contract.
Serving all of Cumberland,
Atlantic, Gloucester coun-
ties. 609-774-5070.
Vineland 2 Bedroom
Condo, 2 Bath, Laundry, 2
Car Garage $1800 +
Utilities. Brendale Gated
Adult 50+ Community.
Handicap Accessible.
856-691-4080
Mobile home for sale
by owner, Berryman's
Branch Park. 1616
Pennsylvania Ave.
#20, Vineland. 3 bed-
room, 2 bath, new
windows, air. $39,900.
856-825-8880.
Myers 3 pt hitch 100 gal.
sprayer, rebuilt completely,
dual pump 6 GPM/300
PSI, boom or hand gun
options. Perfect for small
to medium size operation.
Will last forever. Very good
condition. Asking $2450.
856-906-9384.
Dinette TABLE, CONTEM-
PORARY STYLE, 4
Upholstered chairs.
Photos avail $100. Call
856-691-7974
FRANKLIN MINT
"Butterflies of the
World" Set of 24 plus
3 extra. Brass display
case included.
Sacrifice at $175.
856-691-8396.
For Sale
For Sale
Available March 1st: one
(1) bedroom upstairs
apartment, excellent
downtown area.
Energy/efficient gas heat
& central air. Kitchen with
new appliances. Single or
couple only, $700 per
month plus utilities and
security. Call 856-692-
6849.
Furnished room in North
Vineland, $120/week. Call
856-466-4969.
Grapevine 22-24 021914.qxd:Layout 1 2/17/14 5:18 PM Page 23
WWW.QUALITY-DENTALCARE.COM
Vineland
691-0290
Bridgeton
451-8041
Next to Acme
Across from
Walmart TWOCONVENIENT
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Quality Dental Care has partnered with a few
select dental insurance companies that we feel best
serve our loyal family of patients and the many
patients who we look forward to joining us soon!
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This includes Comprehensive Oral Exam, X-Rays and Cancer Screening.
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Only $299!
When you mention this ad Regularly $499. 3/15/14
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Todays Cosmetic & Family Dentistry
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