Cape May County Herald, 28 November 1984 IIIF issue link — Page 2

2 ' Herald & Lantern 28 November '84

§h,*?JF ^ciauzingM ,/liiLiVL *o8ri^^ ^i^Vv IN FRESH I/ I, if 7 AM 10 MEATS l/l mM0 wm avenue lB%?lKlr I WjjPF rM FOOD MARKET ^ MM; 1 1 1| THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS GOOD THRU DEC. 4 ill Boneless Chuck Roast s1« lb. . j \l ft Boneless Beef For Stew *1*" lb l/fl It" Bolar Roasts .»1™ lb i M l\ Filet Mignon (Wkoie 7 «>. Awl) s3Mlb London Broil if™, t«, Round) s25" lb. if \ j I ] FREEZER PACKAGE SPECIAL II 1 1 $5495 || 1/1 , INCLUDES: jj J ' 5 lbs Roast Beef • j / I j 5 lbs Ground Beel I if \| 5 lbs Pork Roast (Roast or Chops) ,87 I \ 5 lbs Chicken Parts (Legs & Breast) /! , \ \ 5 lbs Sirloin Steak • V I 1 j \ \ '3 lbs Stew Beef [jjj 2 lbs Breakfast Sausage (J) M FROM THE TAKE OUT I

jifll \\ j HAM & EGG SANDWICH l\\\ W/10OZ. Cup A4Kn fj Ml olCottee 51DU 1 \l until 11 a.m. *

MEATBALL SANDWICH |m with Provolone Cheese $^35 jj\

S"""1 " ■* 1 _ ir HOT DOG & KRAUT f / 39* J/J S1SL NOW FEATURING HOT TAKE OUT MEALS t'iSSSK (| «. c*.„, baily ano fresh homemade soup 1434 TEXAS AVE. CAPE MAY 8844474 r Everything Beautiful For *1! Holiday Decorating OPEN TILUHRISTMAS § ami 7.1. p AVALON M p FLOWER^ «) I 1 Jfc Christmas Trees Cut & Live fjL: Unique Gifts I?# yT. Pointsettias, Cyclamen ;§* |f Paper Whites §§ ROUTE 9 fP £& JUST NORTH OF Ajg Li AVALON BLVD. 0PEN 8:3<MS

Mews Notes from Lower Township E. J. Duffy 465-5055

PARKER'S LIQUOR Store owners are expected to answer charges before township council during a special meeting at 7 tonight that the store, Bayshore Road and Delaware Parkway, delivered alcoholic beverages to a minor. Disciplinary charges have been filed to that effect against Leider Enterprises Inc. trading as Parker's. Postponed from Oct. 10, the hearing will be held in Township Hall, 2600 Bayshore Rd., Villas. TOWNSHIP MANAGER James R. Stump moved his family and belongings from Lake Orion, Mich., to the South Cape May section of Lower over the weekend — compliments of township council. Councilmen, with little discussion last week, voted unanimously to pick up Stump's $3,598.78 tab for moving expenses from Stevens Van Lines Inc. Deputy Mayor Joseph Davis said council agreed when hiring Stump during the summer to pay his moving bill. Council has also paid a $329.11 bill submitted by the manager for travel expenses to and from his first job interview, and a $948 trip for two bill Stump submitted for his second interview. •UNFUNDED MOVING expenses," billed from the Administrative and Executive department (Stump), were one of several 1984 budget items to which council transferred money from other accounts last week. "Transfers are to be expected," Stump wrote councilmen Nov. 16, "but many of these transfers are the result of poor budgeting." He made a similar remark during council's work session last week. Speaking as a member of the township committee which council replaced July 1, Mayor Robert Fothergill said he wanted the record to reflect that the 1984 budget was "the responsibility of the chief financial officer," Wade G. Cooper. "I agree with Mr. Fothergill," Stump replied. "I wasn't putting it (budgetary blame) on any one particular person." LOWER TOWNSHIP Rescue Squad benefits from the $60,650 in total budget transfers — pending an audit report on the squad's finances. If the audit's okay, the organization will receive the last installment, toward a total of $50,000 from the township government this year. It has already received half of that amount in a standard municipal contribution earlier this year and part of the other half in emergency funding. As of Oct. 1, the squad took over coverage of Diamond Beach from the Wildwood Crest Ambulance Corps. Rescue Squad Chief Kevin Hart said earlier this month that the volunteers will need more than $50,000 from the

township next year to pay for the additional coverage and other escalating squad expenses. COUNCIL INTRODUCED Ordinance 84-15A last week which, if adopted after a public hearing tentatively scheduled Dec. 17, will authorize Lower officials to conclude mutual aid agreements with Cape May, Cape May Point and , West Cape May. Although not specified in the proposed ordinance, Stump said it would serve to provide insurance ' coverage for police, fire and ambulance personnel from those municipalities if the personnel are injured while answering emergencies in Lower. Reciprocal agreements are expected from the governing bodies of the three towns. Such an agreement is also needed with Wildwood Crest "because of our vulnerability down in the Diamond Beach^area." Stump told council. Councilmen Joseph Lopeiigsm, — said TuesdayVhe^mougm the township has a mutual aid agreement with the Crest but Stump said then it's "still up in the air." NO PARKING will be permitted on a south side section of New England Road, Cold Spring, according to Ordinance 84-8A which council unanimously adopted after a public hearing last week. The ordinance also designates portions of nine roads as through streets with stop signs to be installed at the intersections of their cross streets. COUNCIL TABLED and referred to the Planning Board last week a proposed ordinance (No. 84-1 1A) that would vacate 4th Avenue, Villas, but adopted Ordinance 84-9A by a 3-2 margin. It vacates South Station Avenue, Diamond Beach, to allow construction by AT&L Inc. of 24 condominiums. Recalling opposition from Deputy Mayor Joseph Davis and others when vacating Highland Avenue i had been proposed, Township Solicitor Bruce Gorman predicted similar ] opposition to the proposed i vacating of 4th Avenue before council fielded that ] measure to township | planners. , I FINAL ACTION will be taken Dec. 3 on Ordinance \ 84-12A, which amends Salary Ordinance 84-15 to increase the pay scales of i the manager, councilmen, < two police, the municipal ] solicitor and planner. The proposed ordinance, i approved on first reading i last week, is basically a 1 fiscal housekeeping I measure. Salary scales for / all the positions have been I fixed by previous council t actions. c *** 8 PUBLIC WORKS crews laid 360 feet of pipe in one f fc day this month while con- L structing storm sewers to h drain a three-block section 8 of old Town Bank. By adopting Resolution f, 84-83A last week, council p authorized up to $13,000 in tl

* an emergency contract for the work. Manager Stump has also suggested fall and winter projects to "keep the men busy." Recommended are drainage work for Spruce Street and Fay Avenue, Erma. and for Heidi and Mindy avenues. North, Cape May. The manager wants to field Public Works employes to fight erosion along the northern Villas bayfront. "I have already lined up some winter projects," he told council in a Nov. 16 memo. They include painting the police department and Joseph Millman ComAinity Center, renovating 711b 1 ic buildings, rehabilitating equipment and the Township Hall sprinkler system, emphasizing recycling, updating signs and preparing an inventory of them. REMINDERS - Council meets in special session 7 p.m. tomorrow to review the proposed administrative code (see front page) in Township Hall's conference room. Couhcil's next work ses- — sign there, 7 p.m. Monday, prefcetles its regular meeting. Lowers zoners meet at the same place and time next Tuesday. Members of the Incinerator Authority meet there an hour later the same day. KAREN ANDRUS of Cape May will display ideas for household Christmas decorating during the Gardening by the Sea Club's 10 a.m. meeting next Wednesday in Township Hall. Her theme will be "There is Magic in December." The club plans its Christmas luncheon Dec. 12. For information, call 886-1785. THE LOCAL CHAPTER of AARP also plans a Dec. 12 Christmas luncheon. For information and reservations (by Dec. 7), call 886-7692. LOWER TOWNSHIP'S taxpapers' association holds its Christmas meeting at 7:30 p.m. next Wednesday in the Joseph Millman Community Center, Bayshore Road. BARNEY DOYLE, publicity chairman for Chapter 1197, National Association of Retired Employes, reports that it will hold a monthly meeting 1 p.m. Dec. 13 in the Millman Center. All federal retirees are welcome. ••• LOWER'S Club has already started listing its 1985 events. On Jan. 15, the club plans 8 p.m. open house and membership drive at its Bayshore and Washington Avenue, Villas. will be served. For more information, call Linda Merrill at Five days later, the club a turkey /beef dinner the clubhouse at $5 a Call Anne Myers at for reservations. Contact her as well for inon the club's 6 penny party Feb. l at clubhouse.