X (V 20 O ■ Herald &s|.anJ^r^4^(ugust 84 *
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COMING Allan C. Hill Entertainment Corp. proudly presents UNDER THE "BIG TOP" Jt cape may CAPE MAY county park CT. HOUSE Between Rt. 9 THURS. and C.S.P. AUG. 16th 6 and 8:15 pm Presented As A Community Service of the CAPE MAY COUNTY PARK ZOO CLOWNS • AERIAUSTS ELEPHANTS « ACROBATS f TOR CHOICE SEATS-COME EARLY - NO RESERVED SEATS - CHILD $4.00 To Ant 12 Adults <5.00 ' SAVE * SAVE * SAVE f I ' Discount Tickets On Sale Now At.. .County Park Commission Office, Rt. 9, Cape May Court House.. .Call 465-5271 y Days For Tickets and Information... IMPORTANT!!! The Sponsoring Organization Receives 50% of All Tickets Purchased Before 10 A.M. on the Moming of the Circus.
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News Notes from Lower Township E. J. Duffy 465-5055
LT. CHARLES THORNTON reports that township police arrested 44 adults and two juveniles, including five suspected drunk drivers, while investigating 438 criminal complaints of the 2,030 calls recorded last month. Twenty-four burglaries, 41 larcenies and 32 acts of vandalism were committed in July, he said, compared to nine burglaries, 41 larcenies aiid 34 vandalisms in Jt^neu Thirty adults and one" .juvenile were arrested in June when police investigated 427 criminal and 493 noncriminal complaints from the 1,861 calls received. Police handled-516 noncriminal comfflaintkand made 1,338 property cntfcks last month JThorn ton saia> — They iriyp^Uga ted 67 collisions, issued 115 traffic tickets, burned 3,886 ' gallons of gasoline and logged 43,504 miles on patrol. They recovered $10, 674 in stolen property last month; $60,122 was reported stolen. In June, the force recovered $13,802 when $51,134 was reported stolen. CHIEF RAY BROWN of the Town Bank volunteers said they answered four alarms in July, one less than June, three less than May. On July 4, the firefighters extinguished a minor blaze, caused by a washing machine motor malfunction, in Cape May Beach. Four days later trtey served standby for Erma firemen. Town Bankers fought a truck fire July 14 at Higbee Beach and a car fire at the Schooner Landing development off Bayshore Road. DOT ROTHENBILLER, fire commissioner and secretary to Villas Fire Chief George Costell; reports that the Villas firemen more than made up last month for a slow June. In June, the volunteers answered two calls compared to six in May. Last month they handled nine alarms. ^ They fought brush or grass fires July 1 , 3 and 5 at Millman Lane, Millman Lane and Beach, and at Wildwood Avenue at the Bay, respectively. On July 3, the firefighters also serv«ed as standby for Green Creek volunteers. Villas crews battled car firesJuly y at Breakwater and*Fishing Creek roads and July 13 at Tennessee and States avenues and used the Jaws of Life at a fatal car crash July k> ' along Tabernacle and Shunpike roads (see below )
They extinguished a trash fire July 13 at Hudson Avenue and Bayshore Road and doused a mattress July 21 on DeSoto Avenue. AS USUAL ON the last Sunday of the month, the Villas firemen are serving breakfast and holding a cake sale from 7 a.m. until noon at the firehouse on Bayshore Road. Pancakes, eggs, sausage, bacon and home fries go for $3 adults, $1.75 for children under 12. - TAKE A VOLUNTEER smoke eater to lunch next Mbnday. Aug. 20, as Erma Fire Chief Robert McNulty reminds us, was proclaimed National Volunteer Firefighters' Recognition Day on May 8 when President Reagan signed a joint Congressional resolution, sponsored by U.S. Sen. Bill Bradley (D-NJ). ERMA VOLUNTEERS answered nine alarms last month, one more than June, one less than May On July 15, they assisted Villas firefighters at a twocar crash that cost a Baltimore man his life and left four others injured. Driver William , Budnichuk, 31, was kilted and his wife, Bonnie, 27, hurt in the Sunday afternoon collision at Shunpike and Tabernacle roads. Constance Kirk, 24, of West Chester, Pa., the driver of the other vehicle, her husband, Stephen, 27, and their son, Stephen, 6, were also hospitalized Erma firemen started off the month by answering a smoke report July l at Lund's Fisheries, Schellenger's Landing; an overheated motor on a refer was the cause, McNutty said. Two days later, the volunteers supplied foam at the Wildwood Water Works plant On Route 47, Rio Grande, where a tank truck overturned, spilling 5,100 gallons of gasoline. On July 8, they helped rescue riders stranded on the Sea Serpent roller coaster in Wildwood after the new beast's brakes ' malfunctioned. Four days later, the Firemen responded to a minor fuel spill at the county airport and, the next day Fought an auto fire on Seashore Road. On July 14. they extinguished a minor electrical fire at the Playpen nightspot in Diamond Beach, McNulty noted. They doused an illegal honfire near a campground off Seashore Road July 17 and helped a motorist July 19 whose car sustained a gas tank leak white traveling along that roadway '"hich is being repaired. Erma crews held rope exercises during a July 16 drill at Crest Haven, made their monthly apparatus checks the day before and inspected the vehicles July JUNE AND JULY reports are pending from the Lower Township Rescue Squad which launched its second 1984 fund drive this month. Chief Kevin Hart said the ) squad's goal is $30,000. 1 He's scheduled to appear
before township council next Monday to press for a second $25,000 contribution from the township this year. "1 hope they're going to be a little bit more receptive," Hart said of the upcoming meeting. During recent meetings, council backed township treasurer Wade Cooper in his bid for more extensive financial information from the squad in justifying the emergency township contribution. The squad needs the contribution and private donations, Hart maintained, to help pay for used ambulances it recently acquired and because of the additional costs expected when the squad assumes emergency coverage Jan. 1 from Wildwood Crest for the township shorefront along Diamond Beach. So far, said the chief, he's heard nothing new about plans to open an emergency substation there. "Hopefully, we'll get that resolved before the Jan. 1 deadline," he said. In the off-season, it takes an ambulance 20 minutes of normal driving to travel the nine miles from its Villas garage to Diamond Beach, Hart said, and 14 minutes to drive six miles from the squad station at Racetrack and Town Bank roads. "You almost have to perform a miracle if you have (to answer a call to) a car-
^\i ^ diac arrest," the chief cobi-^ > plained. "You wily hav^J v four to six minutes before' y^u have brain damage. " THE AMERICAN RED Cross will be conducting a CPR Instructors' Course (lecture method) at the Lower Township Rescue Squad's CPR building, 1602 Scott Ave., North Cape May, froin 7-10:30 p.m. tomorrow and again on / Tuesday. For more information, call 886-3892. REMINDER - T^lay's the deadline for reserving advertising space in the 1984- '85 sports program for Lower Cape May Regional School District. Full-page (8V4- by 11-inches) ads sell for $100, half-pagers at $50, according to John McGraw of the district's Athletic Boosters' Club. To place ads, call him at , 886-4323 OUR PRINTERS gave Dolores Hughes, township mercantile license inspector, a $27,000 raise last year, reporting her annual salary at $30,300 instead of the actual $3,300. Dolly's probably1' delighted to hear about the raise but we didn't want readers to think the new government authorized it. Dolly, when you want to collect, give me a call and I'll give you the printers' number. VIRGINIA BAILEY, cor responding secretary for The Villas Women's (Page 21 Please)
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