16
Herald & Lantern 1 June'83
HEAD ASSOCIATION — P«ul Dare, president of the Cape May County Bar Association, installed new officers of the county I^egal Secretaries Association at the Washington Inn in Cape Muy. I*fl to right. Martha Morsch, Wildwood Crest, vice president; Annette Webb. Rio Cirande. president. Dare; Patricia Lund. North Cape May. recording secretary; Doris Williams. Court House, treasurer; and Rosemarie Hee, North Cape May.governor.
SWJ-’.KT , BLACK AND WHITE and tiger striped hittens.^N weeks old. are available for adoption.
YVKI.FAKE
SOCIETY OF ( APE MAY COUNTY INC. P o Bhx MR North Cape May. is a non-profit volunteer organization. Besides the animal above they have numerous Other pets for adoption and also offer a lost and found service Call 465-340:1. Open Tues thru
A Pet\
THE HUMANE .SOCIETY OF OCEAN CITY INC. at l Shelter Rd off Tennessee Ave in Ocean City has the pet l>elow for adoption as well as many other canines and felines Shots are administered before adoption The Societ.y is rurf by volunteers and donations are appreciated The.y’re open between I and 4 p m daily. Weds 5-H p m . and can be reached at 399-2018
many cats and dogs who I are lovable and anxious to I find good homes. Call the I Humane Soceity of Ocean I City at 399-2018.
Arbor Day Plantings-
STONE HARBOR - A dual tree planting ceremony marked Arbor Day in the borough when a tree donated by the Garden Club was planted by students of the Elementary School and dedicated to the entire student body An original poem written by Colleen Dougherty was read at the dedication. In the other ceremony a tree, also donated by the Garden Club, was planted in the flower bed directly outside Borough Hall by Ted Pain. Administrative Assistant to mayor and council. Nearly all the council members were present for this ceremony along with Mrs. Ramona Wilson, president of the Garden Club, and Mrs. Dede Harris, chairlady of the island planting.
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DORIS and TOM MITCHELL. 10905 1st Ave. stopped on their way home from Florida to see good buddies Bob and Betty Blah-, who bought a home in Southern Pines, N.C. in May of ’82. They were former residents of Court House. Doris says the Blair’s new home is just beautiful; a very large older cottage surrounded, by manicured rolling lawns, azaleas, rhododendrons and dogwood everywhere. They had a great reunion on May 14 and it didn’t take too long to find out why Bob was so particularly exuberant. He and Tom Mitchall spend most of their free time playing golf and having reached the age of 70. Bob shot his first hole-in one after all these years on the links three days before their arrival. The Mitchells were more excited for Bob than he was, if possible. NICE TO know there are still some people who are still scrupulously honest. Matt and Drew Wollery of 3rd Ave. were shopping together at Shop-Rite in Rio Grande when Matt spied an envelope in the bottom of her cart. She opened it out of curosity and to her shock found four $100 notes! She describes her feeling as that of being shocked rather than happy Fortunately also enclosed was a withdrawal slip with the owner's name on it. She took the 400 smackers right to the manager, and the grateful owner later picked it up. May 24 Anne Allen pick ed up Marie Spence. Matt Wollery and this scribe to go to the Women’s Civic Club luncheon at the Whitebrier Inn. It was a gorgeous day but we all admitted changing twice before we left because the temperature changed so rapidly as we deressed. We got a good table in spite of the crowd. At our table were Marie (Mrs James) W'ood wearing a suede-like pink suit. Rosalind Blair in a lavender suit, Peg Grimes in printed pink suit. Alice Daniels in lavender', Marie Spence in a navy and white suit as was Anne Allen. Club Pres Dotty Stump greeted us all and told us not to foreget the June 14 luncheon at. the club and Marge Otten read an amusing poem reminding us to make a point of welcoming new members and introducing six of the approx imately 20 new members joining since the new book was printed. Then she asked the members present to stand and give their 1 names so the newcomers would know who we are. The day before
Alma Sqoasoni and this scribe had met at Island Girl trying to get just what we wanted to wear for the luncheon and as we rose we found we had both changed at the last minute from our chic (we thought) new dresses to an old suit Tor wamrth. i Elaine and Bob Juni of 83rd St. joined us at the S.H. Seniors Fun Night for the first time last week and were introduced by prexy Harry 8trohmetz r who won his bid for renomination to Borough Council by a healthy margin. Bob, who has summered here since childhood and has traveled to many exotic countries with him, always expanding her field o f expertise — nutrition. Another new pair showed up the same night. Betty and Will Allen of the S.H Rescue Squad came with their blood pressure reading on the house. Our thanks to them both for spending their evening with us. Ruth Kapp was on the crest of the wave when we met her at the Whitebrier Inn at the Civic Club luncheon the other day. She has moved her business, ‘Royal Gemstones", and is now associated with Ruth Lee Jewelers in Rio Grande Mall. She is open for business right now so you Memorial Day Week visitors can see the stock of remarkable stones she has brought back from her jewel mine in South
TRENTON - State residents have been urged to take precautions against the chance of their pets contracting rabies. State 1 Health Commissioner Dr J. Richard Goldstein reported that 35 animals in Pennsylvania, most of them raccoons, were found to have rabies this year. The Pennsylvania outbreak reflects a national problem he said. According to U.S Center for Disease Control (CDC), the number of reported rabid raccoons in the nation jumped from 21 to 1980 to 837 in 1982. The national outbreak is centered in the Virginia and Maryland area, but has been spreading by approximately 25-50 miles per year, and New Jersey and Delaware are the most likely states into which it
America. She showed me privately a 7-plus carat Colombian emerald that she had sold which knocked the socks off anything I ever saw on Thelma Chrysler. Years ago, I saw Thelma dancing at the once-famous Stork Club wearing her collection and almost fainted at all the brilliance in one spot. Nice to see lights on in Bill and Betty Webster’s cottage across the basin again but disappointed that Bill hasn't fully recovered from his fall last year. Do hope it doesn’t interfere with his daily swim again this summer — one of our great joys tp watch his powerful swims each afternoon. Jay and Edna Glesecke have returned too. Great to have that terrific gent Paul Scarlett back in residence; 86th St. gets more normal each hour now, it seems. Larry Kane bf CBS Channel 10 stressed the point of making every vote count the other night by reminding us of three things we had forgotten, if we ever knew them. In 1776 the decision to make America an- English-speaking coun try. rather than a Germanspeaking land passed by one vote; Adolph Hitler became head of the Nazi Party by one vote; and Selective Service was passed by. you guessed it, one vote. Keep this in mind on June 7 and make your one vote count.
may spread. WITH THE expansion of the rabid raccoon problem, there is concern that the state's cat population will be stricken, as cats are nocturnal animals known to associate with raccoons. According to the CDC, the number of rabid cats in the United States exceeded the number of rabid dogs by almost 20 percent in 1981. Residents in South Jersey are urged to have their cats, as well as their dogs, vaccinated against rabies They are also urged not to allow their pets to roam unleashed, to report any unusual animal behavior to local health officials. and refrain from trapping, handling, or otherwise unnecessarily exposing themselves to wild animals.
Warning Issued
County Contract Cost: $1.04M
(From Page 1) prescription drugs, accidental death and disability and life insurance. Employes get 14 holidays and three personal days; 15 days of sick leave and a vacation benefit of one day per month on the job. That runs from 12 days after one year to 25 days after 25 years. Employes also receive longevity pay of 2 percent after five years and an additional 2 percent every five years thereafter to a maximum of 14 percent after 40 years THE CONTRACT also provides that the county will continue hospitalization and life insurance programs' for retiring employes until their death, as soon as the law permits It presently limits this benefit to persons with 25 years of service. • The contract covers most non-court-related clerical employes and workers at the Road Dcpartnient. Bridge Department, Park Commission. Crest Haven Complex, Buildings and Grounds and Air-
port Maintenance departments. A second contract covering some 65 court-related clerical workers is expected to be concluded shortly and contains similar provsions, Sturm said. Most clerical personnel work a 35-hour week, from 8:30 a m. to 4:30 p.m. with an hour for lunch. Library employes work a 40-hour week. Most non-clerical workers have a 40-hour week, but that includes meal time not to exceed one hour. The previous contract expired Dec. 31 Negotiations began in late November, but an impasse was declared and state mediation requested in February When that, too, failed, the county and union requested state factfinding. Factfinder Lawrence Hammer of Long Island presided over two full days of hearings on April 27 and May 10 and successfully mediated the dispute without resorting to factfinding.

