16 Herald - Lantern - Dispatch 10 July '85
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5 1 3 CARPENTER S LANE 10.5 CAPE MAY • 884-0052 *»« I" kitt mtii> * j ■ W- The Gf Sandpiper Galerie 5 ^ow ^Pen ^or ',s 22nd season! Come and shop in ' S) ihe beautiful suburbs of Stone j" Harbor at 109th St. ® 3rd Ave. , V- 368-2040 J "^oon 10 — SwwvThny Tdl Trn _ [ OF" Md "w i . — . t-U iFM contcmporarr crafti ,r/ axSf «>w ^ t"' 74J&ii Sy .-fmtiua* yp* v- w v"'1 :i' ' 11:0,11 vv • '*+1:***' OPEN DAILY I III 1 I 13 1 H WiLLWM R|S QflLLERIES 1 (H STONE HARBOR, NEW JERSEY ||I 2nd Avenue at 94th Street B=1 368-6361 H |4 July 5 - July 24 El Pearl Slobodian El H Malvern. PA ■9 Watercolors Ej AVALON, NEW JERSEY H VtM at the golden inn eJ q a conference center pi 78TH & DUNE DRIVE 368-3363 July lO • July 29 Erna Tunno Harrisburg. PA Mixed Media
Lower Township ' i Q"»v 4 465-5055 ^ ^C~
]} COUNCILMEN marked j their first anniversary in S office last week by recognizing the civic ) achievements of local i volunteers. y Prime among them was Ruth Hart of Villas, state counselor of the Daughters of America and an officer in the township Regular Republican Organization. She received a peck from Mayor Robert Fothergill, and a framed full-page Associated Press article about Memorial Day, for helping organize Lower's May 31 services at Town Hall. "This is her day, let me tell you." the mayor said of Hart. The first state DOA counselor from southern New Jersey in 22 years promised a "bigger and better" Memorial Day service next year. She said she was pleased to see more and more businesses that "make money here" showing the colors during U.S. holidays. Fothergill also framed AP articles to her fellow Memorial Day organizers: John "Jack" Moran, former deputy mayor, director of the county Veterans' Breau and president of the county Men's Republican Club. Villas businessman Stu Millard, president of the Lower Township Chamber of Commerce; Nan LaCorte for the 70-member Richard M Teitelman band; and Eugene Armstrong for the local VFW post honor . guard. MILLARD AND the chamber also won township recognition last week for sponsoring the 1985 Drumfish-Weakfish Derby, and Cleanup Weeks. June 3-15. As reported in our sports section last week, more than 400 fisherman participated in the derby. 300 more than last year. With $500 contributed by the township, top winners in both angling groups took home $250 prizes and trophies Their names will be inscribed on permanent plaques in Township Hall Other winners received Penn reels, and bait boxes CERTIFICATES of Appreciation for Cleanup Weeks also went to: Boy Scout Troop 88 leaders Frank Pimpinella of North Cape May. Jim Jones and Donald Gipple of Villas; Troop 87 scout master Jim Coover of Erma; troop committee: Pete Katsamakos of North Cape May and Troop 193; Pack 87 cub master Jim Crowther of Erma. Bill Sutton of Erma, scout committee chairman; assistant Den 3 leader Kate Distepola of Erma ; Den 2 leader Ed Szotak and Lower Township Consolidated School personnel. Roberto Diane. Marilyn Kobik, Margaret Swanson. Missy Wallace. Johnathan Vile, Sylvia Rittweger, Evelyn McCoy and Debra LeGates verna righter. president of the 70-member Gardening by the Sea Club, accepted a proclamation from the mayor, honoring
the organization on its fifth anniversary July 1. The club was also honored with a Certificate of Appreciation for planting and landscaping the weedy lawn in ffbnt of Township Hall into a handsome garden. KEVIN JACKSON, son or Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jackson of Vacation Road, Villas, collected a proclamation from the mayor, honoring the Lower Cape May Regional (LCMR) High School athlete as a member of the all-star soccer team that will represent the U.S. this summer in Europe. Fothergill asked residents to contribute toward Jackson's trip by sending donations to The Jackson Fund c/o LCMR's Athletic Booster Club, 687 Route 9, Cape May N.J., 08204. REMINDERS - Lower's MUA is scheduled for final action after a 7:30 public hearing tonight on a proposed resolution (No. 85-A-42) to finance 35 percent of a $48,599 study on alternatives to connecting with the county MUA's Wildwoods-Lower sewage treatment plant, Rio Grande, in July 1988. Estimated at $20-$30 million, the project is currently mandated by the state Department of Environmental Protection. If the local MUA adopts the resolution as expected, the county is supposed to pay . 65 percent of the study cost. Tonight's meeting will be held in the MUA administration building. 2900 Bayshore Rd., Villas. Other subjects on the agenda were unavailable at press time. • Tomorrow night at 7:30 p.m., Lower's planners hold a work review session in Township Hall, 2600 Bayshore Rd , Villas. • Local chapters of the Ancient Order of Hibernians and Knights of Columbus plan a bring-your-own-lunch picnic in the county park, off Route 9, Court House, from noon til whenever Sunday. Cooking facilities and refreshments will be available. Tickets ($3) can be ordered from the Knights (884-9643) or St Raymond's rectory (886-5366). Children under 12 will be admitted free. •Township council's next regular work session is 7 p.m. Monday followed by an 8 p.m. regular meeting in Township Hall. Councilmen are slated for final action after an 8 p.m. public hearing on two proposed ordinances ( Nos. 85-20 and 85-21 ) which will permit municipal recycling centers at Villas and Town Bank firehouses. Both measures were approved for first reading last week. Council may also announce reappointments or replacements for members of zoning, planning and health boards, the MUA and Incinerator Authority. Applications for open positions on them were due July 8. •The Incinerator Authority and Environmental Commission are scheduled for 7:30 p.m. meetings next Tuesday,
both in Township Hall. • Township Manager James R. Stump also has scheduled a 7:30 p.m. meeting next Tuesday in Township Hall to discuss sanitary sewer installations for 152 Cape May Beach homes. "Basically, what we're going to be talking about is money," Stump told the audience at council's regular meeting last week. He estimated the installation cost at $200,000 but has proposed that each homeowner pay for sewers at $236 a year for five years. • After surveying the township, Stump reported "some other areas. ..that perhaps also need sewage." One of them is the Baywood Park subdivision in Fishing Creek, he said, planning a 7:30 p.m. meeting July 24 with its
residents to talk about sewer installation. Stump, who serves as executive MUA director, said he's also "looking into" sanitary sewers for the Sheridan Tract — Breakwater Village (Long Bros, development) and Breakwater Estates (Briarwood Drive) in Erma. • Township officials will conduct a public hearing 1 p.m. next Wednesday in Township Hall on Stump's proposal to apply for a $350,000 Small Cities Community Development Block Grant to rehabilitate about 400 Villas homes between Bayshore Road, Greenwood and Bates avenues. Homeowners would receive money to improve their properties from loans, with payments deferred until those properties are sold, Stump explained last week.
Recyclable Pickups Slated in Summer
CAPE MAY - The pickup of recyclable materials in the city will continue during the summer months, Charlotte Todd, chairman of the environmental commission, announced last week. A change in the program is that all glass items must be separated by color. Each color should be put in a separate cardboard box or other container, Todd, said. Workers from Jersey Cape Diagnostic Training and Opportunities Center will collect containers of paper, glass and aluminum in the area north of Michigan and Pennsylvania Avenues July 17. 31. and Aug. 14 and 25. IN AREA TWO. which is west of Ocean and Elmira Streets, the collections will be July 18, and Aug. 1, 15, and 29. In Area Three, east of Ocean Street, and south of Michigan and Penn-
sylvania Avenues, collections will be July 19, and Aug. 2, 16, and 30. Paper items that can be recycled include newspapers, corrugated boxes, grocery bags and writing paper. The items should be bundled to weigh no more than 35 pounds, tied, and put in a box or bag. PLASTICS, carbons, and material with excessive glue are not acceptable. Lids, metal rings, and labels do not have to be removed from glass containers, but the containers should be rinsed. Aluminum products should be flattened, and must be clean. Materials should be placed where they can be seen from the householder's front door, and away from regular trash. There will be no collections on July 4 or on rainy days.
Oil Spill Fund Ok'd
WASHINGTON. D C. - The House Merchant Marine and Fisheries Committee has approved legislation co-sponosred by Congressman Bill Hughes (DNJ) which would help assure the prompt clean-up and compensation for harm resulting from oil spills. Hughes said the legislation is needed to help balance the impact of offshore energy activities with the customers of communi-
ties. businesses and individuals onshore: According to Hughes, the legislation establishes a marine pollution insurance fund which would be financed by a 1.3 cent per barrel premium on oil Money from the fund would be used for clean-up purposes, and to compensate individuals harmed by the spill when the responsible party cannot be located or is unable to pay.
In Running For Million
ATLANTIC CITY - Four Cape May County residents are among the finalists in the Grand Prize Drawing of the recently completed "Cold Cash" instant game in the New Jersey Lottery, scheduled today at the Atlantis Casino Hotel.
They are: Anne D. Gillespie, Sea Isle City; John A. Guinan. Wildwood; Elaine B. Holsonback, Palermo; and Elizabeth Turner. Court House. The grand prize is $1 million ($50,000 a year for 20 years), and there are 5225.000 in smaller prizes.

