Ocean City Sentinel, 14 September 1893 IIIF issue link — Page 2

OCEAN CITY SENTINEL. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY. R. CURTIS ROBINSON, EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR. OCEAN CITY, NEW JERSEY.

Advertisements in local columns, 10 cents per inc. each insertion. Monthly and yearly rates furnished on application. Job work promptly done by experienced hands. THURSDAY, SEPT. 14, 1893. Entered at the Post Office at Ocean City, N. J., as second-class mail matter.

TIME is like a muffled file; it works but makes no noise.

IF a man's ability cannot be measured by dollars, he must be a man of cents.

THE battle-cry of the Republicans of this State--down with the gambler and his race-track!

A MAN who orders several years' subscription on a newspaper and asks the postmaster to send it back marked "refused," is, in our estimation, mean

enough to put tar on his hat when taking up the church collection in order to steal the small change.

HARDLY a day passes by now which does not chronicle a terrible accident of calamity. Fifteen lives were lost last Thursday in Massachusetts by a train falling through a bridge. This is only one of the many horrors which will make '93 go down in history as a black

year.

THOSE dear souls who on that chilly

night last November comforted us with

the assurance that we could go home and eat crow, did not know that they too in one year would have to substitute crow for the Thanksgiving turkey. Under a Republican Administration the people eat turkey; under a Democratic one they eat dry bread and crow.

HOW a mother can punish her child as an Orange woman did last week is beyond comprehension. Because her little seven-year-old daughter disobeyed her, she inflicted a terrible punishment by holding the little one's hand on a hot stove until it was burned to a crisp. A woman that will do such a deed should be given a life imprisonment. She is not safe at large. THE World's Fair at Chicago is now probably at its zenith, with an attendance exceeding 1,000,000 per week. It is not improbable, however, that this total may be reached or exceeded during each of the remaining weeks, for the Fair has been splendidly advertised by the early visitors. Every one who goes to Chicago recommends all his friends to follow. These volunteer agents for promoting attendance at the Fair reach every town and city in the country, and their influence is now being felt.

THIS week hundreds of people will

welcome the SENTINEL, who have been too busy during the summer to keep up with the daily routine of happenings in the city and throughout the county. With the close of the season they have time to read, and it is hoped that they may soon get back to their usual satisfactory existence.

The SENTINEL is ready to keep them informed, advised, instructed and

guided in the right path, politically, socially and morally. It's record since 1890 will be lived up to, and with this outline of the coming months it begs of old and new readers a continuance of former pleasant relations. Read the SENTINEL and get your friends to subscribe for it. SOCIETY out in Chattanooga, Tenn., is all agog because of Judge Moon's charge to the Grand Jury on the gambling evil. The Judge made but little discrimination between the high-toned progressive euchre player and the common gambler. He said, "not only is gambling carried on in regular gambling resorts, but people of high standing and respectability gamble. They may not put down money, but they set an example for others in playing for prizes and awards. In these progressive euchre games these persons play for fine pictures or gold-headed canes. Examples are set that are a violation of law, and it is just as demoralizing as common gambling. A conviction of one man of the higher class is better, as an example, than the conviction of ordinary people for common gambling." There are many people who will agree with the learned judge.

STUDENTS of political history will verify the assertion that the party which is on the defensive is always on the losing side. How is it at the pre-

sent time? Nearly every Republican organ in the country is waging a warfare on the Democratic party and its principles, while the Democratic organs are filling their columns with denials and protestations which are truly pitiful to read. The Republicans charge the Democrats with being responsible for the present hard times. The Democrats grow red in the face and deny it, and quote poor Thomas Dolan in support of their denial. The Republicans declare that the administration is in fa-

vor of free trade and wild-cat currency, and the Democrats voluminously at-

tempt to explain that "tariff reform" does not mean free trade, nor the repeal of the tax on State banks, wild-cat cur-

rency. The Democrats are in a badly demoralized shape at present, and at the next election they will be so badly routed generally, that they will not know whether it was a tidal wave or a West India cyclone which sent them high and dry on the rocks of oblivion and defeat.

MISSILES FROM THE HEAVENS. Billions of Them Fall, but Comparatively Few Reach the Earth. "It is a mistake to suppose that meteorites burst in the proper sense of the word," said a scientist to a writer. "But it often happens that they are broken to pieces on striking the atmosphere of the

earth. This may seem surprising, but let me call your attention to an analogy: Strike the surface of the water with your fist, and, though a fluid, the resistance it

opposes to the blow seems almost as strong as if it were solid. Now, the me-

teorite is moving at a tremendous rate of speed. If small, it is set on fire in an instant by the friction of the air and after glowing for a moment brightly is con-

sumed.

"On any night in summer you will

see 'shooting stars' now and then. They

are meteorites, which on coming into contact with the earth's atmosphere are set afire. This is not surprising, inasmuch as they approach the planet on

which we live at a speed which often attains 44 miles a second. By causing the

destruction of meteorites the atmosphere serves as a protection for people on the globe, who would otherwise be pelted

by such missiles to a dangerous extent.

It is estimated that not less than 10,000,-

000 of them, big enough to be visible to the naked eye, strike the earth every 24 hours.

"By contact with this planet the me-

teorites are raised to a temperature which reaches from 3,000,000 to 4,000,000 de-grees--high enough to consume the hardest known substance almost instantly. Thus only those of large size reach the earth before being entirely burned up. The greatest number of such bodies can be seen just before daybreak, because by that time we are on the front side of the globe as it moves through space. The elevation at which most of them are visible has been found to be between 45 and 80 miles, very few being seen at a greater

height than 100 miles.

"It is believed by most astronomers that some very large meteors have entered our atmosphere and have passed out into space again, their great momentum being sufficient to take them away from the earth's attraction. What these flying bodies are is a question that has been much disputed, but it is considered most likely that they are the debris of broken up comets. In one recent instance the correctness of this theory has found striking proof. That was the case of the comet of Biela. It was discovered in 1826 and was again observed in 1832, 1845 and 1852. In 1845 it had split into two parts, and in 1872 it failed to appear when and where it should have done. Evidently it had been smashed up, and prediction was made that there would be a great meteoric shower composed of the remains of the lost comet. This prediction was fulfilled. "Certain groups of meteors move in elliptical orbits around the sun. Occasionally the earth passes through their clusters, producing what are known as meteoric showers. Such showers occur annually from the 9th to the 12th of August, and there is a similar display in

November once every 33 years. The stream of the August meteors is estimates to be from 5,000,000 to 10,000,000

miles thick. The earth, though traveling with the velocity of 2,000,000 miles a day, is immersed in it for several days. "The fall of meteorites to the earth is sometimes accompanied by a great display of light, occasionally illuminating an area of many thousand square miles. When such an event occurs at night, and with loud detonations, so great in some instances as to shake houses and frighten men and animals, the explosions are caused by the breaking up of the meteor. Ordinarily you will find that such meteoric bodies are coated on the outside with a black substance, which is the effect merely of fusion of the superficial material by great heat. A piece of Biela's comet was actually picked up in Mexico in 1872 at the time of the shower of its remains. Naturally it is considered interesting.

"Such great interest is taken in meteorites that all of those collected have been carefully catalogued. They are mostly composed of iron, with usually a percentage of nickel and cobalt and sometimes copper and tin. It is customary to saw them into slices, which is a laborious process, for sale or for exchange among museums. Sometimes the slices are prettily polished, or the cut surfaces are etched with acid so as to expose the crystalline structure. This structure is in no two such bodies exactly the same, and the differences are thought well worth studying. Attempts have been made to counterfeit meteorites because they are so valuable, but without success."--Washington Star.

The Last English Rabbit.

The game of the world is decreasing, and as new lands are opened to civilization so it will get less and less. In the struggle for existence, there will be no

room for the sportsman. His requirements will grow more modest as time advances, but they will not be satisfied. The last British wolf was killed in Suth-

erlandshire about the year 1700 by a man named Polson. Who will be handed down to posterity as the slayer of the last British rabbit? What a pathetic picture

might be drawn of the last cock pheas-

ant! Perhaps some Macaulay of the far distant future may astonish his readers

by his account of what went on in the rural districts of Great Britain in the nineteenth century.

He would relate how, owing to the scantiness of the population, men used to

shoot partridges and pheasants by the thousand on ground then and for gener-

ations past the sites of immense towns; telling how the great garden of England,

then mapped out into small tenements, each laboriously and minutely culti-

vated, with no waste of wood or hedge row, used in those far away years to be

furiously ridden over by hundreds of horsemen in pursuit of an animal long since extinct in the land and only known to the curious in old books of natural history.--Macmillan's Magazine.

Wonderful Smokeless Coal.

Some wonderful "smokeless coal" is reported from the Ouachita river dis-

trict in Arkansas. The vein is 42 inches wide. The coal burns without smoke or poke, and one ton will go as far as 10 of the ordinary variety. Twenty per cent

of it is oil, which makes a paint you can't burn at all.--New York Recorder.

A woman says that a man can be a [?] wrangler and acquire fame as an authority on most [?] subjects, but he cannot answer the questions of a 5-year-old-child without revealing his ignorance.

Electric Freight Engines.

The three electric locomotives being constructed by the General Electric company to haul cars through the Belt

railroad tunnel are nearly completed. The machinery is about finished, and

the generators are well under way. The locomotives will be of 1,200 horsepower

each and will consist of three separate trucks coupled together to form one

motor. The weight on drivers will be 100 tons, and the number of drivers to

each locomotive will be 12. The maximum weight of freight trains to be

hauled is placed at 1,200 tons, which can be carried at a speed of 15 miles an hour;

maximum weight of passenger train, 500 tons; speed, 30 miles an hour.

Each axle of the locomotive has mount-

ed upon it a gearless motor flexibly connected to the driving wheels, and means are provided for controlling the motors

and commutating them, so that high ef-

ficiency can be attained at nearly all rates of speed by running the motors either in series, multiple series or multiple, according to the load to be hauled and speed desired. The current will be sup-

plied to the motors from the generators by the regular trolley wire, with ground return through the rails. Where switches

and sidings occur special arrangements will be made to prevent the trolley by any chance from jumping the wire.--Baltimore American.

To Be Buried Alive. The mind reader, A. J. Seymour, is generally known in Illinois, and his proposed attempt to be buried and remain in the ground while a crop of barley is grown on his grave creates interest throughout the state. Dr. E. C. Dunn of Rockford has been selected by Seymour as a manager. Dr. Dunn says: "There is no question that this feat can be performed. I have seen it performed successfully three times in India, at Allahabad, Delhi and Benares." For several days Seymour will be fed upon a diet of fat and heat producing food. He will then throw himself into a cataleptic state, the lungs will be filled with pure air to their fullest capacity and the tongue pulled back and partially down the throat in such a manner as to completely close the aperture to the

lungs. The nose, eyes and ears will be hermetically sealed with wax.

After parafline has been spread over the entire body to close the pores it will be ready for burial. The body will be put into an extra large casket. This

will be placed inside another and both will be perforated in order that if any

poisonous gases exude from the body they may make their escape and be absorbed by the soil. The interment is to be made in a clay soil.

An Old Carpet Worth $5,500.

The longer a carpet is used in the coiners' department at the United States mint the more it is worth. Wear and tear do not diminish its value. Yesterday a thick woolen carpet that has been on the coiners' floor for seven years was taken up and carefully cremated. The precious ashes were scrupulously gathered together, as if they were the relics of some departed saint, and by an elaborate refining process the government

recovered 279 ounces of gold, worth over $5,500. The metal had been deposited there by the infinitesimal abrasions and disintegrations of the yellow metal while being converted from bullion into coin.

Even the heavy gloves of the men who handle bullion are incinerated, and the gold brought back to Uncle Sam's coffers. Even the smoke from the furnaces used for melting the metal is made to redeliver the treasure with which it is

trying to escape, and from the sooit in the chimney cunning little bars of the yellow stuff are secured.--San Francisco Examiner.

The Energetic Camera Fiend.

For several days an enterprising pho-

tographer from Kansas has had a masked camera so arranged in a tent at the main crossing into the Cherokee Strip that he can take a negative of everybody pass-

ing without his knowledge. As the department holds that every person who now goes upon the strip is a "sooner" and loses his right to take land there, these negatives will become very valuable evidence against those going in now to hunt

out good claims, and the owner of them can command a good price from each subject to have his negative destroyed,

or can sell the same to contestors or the government attorneys employed to hunt up evidence against perjurers.--Guthrie Cor. Chicago Herald.

Died For Love at Ninety-nine.

At Rostoff, on the Don, Prokop Dogo-

bionko, an old corporal of the Russian army, aged 99, committed suicide by hanging. Before perpetrating the deed, however, he drank a litre of spirits, ac-

cording to Russian custom. Dogobionko had fought in the battles of the Beresina and of Leipsic. Preparations were being made at Rostoff to celebrate the corporal's birthday when the old gentleman made away with himself. Under Dogobionko's spirit bottle a letter was found which stated the motive for the suicide. He was madly in love with a girl of 16,

who would have nothing to do with him and who had styled him an "old gentle-

man."--Petersburg Herald.

French Servants and Wealthy Shopkeepers. The one extravagance of dress of the French servant girl lies in having her best gown made by a dressmaker instead of making it herself. Hence her corsages always fit her well, and her plain stuff

costume has a degree of style about it which she is fully capable of appreciating. The ladies of the so called bour-

geois set--the wives and daughters of rich shopkeepers and manufacturers--

very rarely indulge in rich fashionable toilets. Mme. Bouciant, the foundress of the Bon Marche, was worth millions upon millions. Always arrayed in black

silk or satin of excellent quality, but made in the plainest possible style, she

looked to the last hour of her life just who she was--the greatest and richest shopkeeper in Paris possibly, but still a shopkeeper, and one that never tried to

look like anything different. When the daughter of one of these wealthy tradespeople marries, her trousseau is usually very superb, but the famous masters of

the art of dress are seldom or never called upon to exert their inventive tal-

ents in her behalf.--Lucy Harper in Home Journal.

Quite Right.

Jaspar--It is all right to scorn titles, but if a marquis came to court your daughter what would you do? Jumpuppe--I would toe the mark.--Truth. Folly of Hoarding. It is really remarkable that so many people in this country, who have funds from which they might earn a good rate of interest, persist in locking up notes in safe deposit vaults or pack them away in old stockings. Money will earn today large returns, with the best of real estate security as first class collateral to protect the lender, and yet a great many individuals, waiting for they know not what, decline to take advantage of what is an unusual opportunity for making money. The currency of a country is

intended to circulate as evidence of cred-

it. If it does not, it becomes absolutely useless to everybody. In a famine a community would be no better off if it locked up millions of barrels of flour than if it had none at all. The same is precisely true of money.--Washington News. Browning to Coleridge. Browning loaned Lord Coleridge one of his works to read, and afterward, meeting the poet, the lord chief justice said to him: "What I could understand I heartily admired, and parts ought to be immortal. But as to much of it I really could not tell whether I admired it or not, because for the life of me I could not understand it." Browning replied, "If a reader of your caliber un-

derstands 10 per cent of what I write, I think I ought to be content."--San Francisco Argonaut.

The first real railway tunnel in Finland will be the one on the new Hel-singsfor-Abo coast line, which will pass

through a mountain between Ekenäs and Fiskars.

Wanamaker's. PHILADELPHIA, Monday, Sept. 11, 1893. ALL READY FOR FALL! Early shipments of Fall stuffs have been afloat all August and crowding in upon us the past week. ALL our buyers have been at their best in collecting the newest and best things.

SIXTEEN of them for this season have been abroad!

An hour after 12 is just one, whatever you do, and 16 men

sent out to foreign countries from one firm to pick out ex-

clusive goods and choose out styles and kinds that somebody must put legs under if they are to walk this way--is

a solid fact that speaks well for old slow Philadelphia, say what you like!

Years teach more than books of newspapers. This is the seventeenth year of this busi-

ness college where the main business is to learn what peo-

ple want and get it for them that they may take it as they need, at the lowest cost.

To anticipate and assemble what people want is almost a

science, an altogether different thing from massing lots of mer-

chandise to sell at a profit. Our idea of storekeeping is

the exact reverse of the old one.

This house can never be a good market for poor merchandise, whatever the temptation.

The Largest Fact

in this season's announcement is that Lower Prices Have Come. This fact crops out all over the store.

It is not so with every article, but sufficiently so to show the trend. If you do not buy your goods for less this Fall, it is because you do not read

our advertisements or shut your eyes to full advantages.

Like Ourselves hundreds of manufacturers Today put first the creating and maintaining

of employment for as many people as possible. If special prices or unusual discounts are given to us (of which you are not aware) we take them off to you in the new price, to make larger sales and full time for workmen instead of half time.

Even a smaller profit will go with us steadily through this

Fall and Winter. Our total stocks are larger than this

time last year, and yet it is in assortment rather than quanti-

ties. In new designs and choicest foreign novelties single pieces and short lengths were ordered for the purpose of giv-

ing exclusive styles to a very few persons. No one shall stand at any door to make a face at you for

not carrying away a bundle or to try to turn your back to look at something else.

Come and visit as you please--your friends also. The store is yours for courtesies and for such service as you seek your-

self.

JOHN WANAMAKER.

OCEAN CITY A Moral Seaside Resort.

Not Excelled as a Health Restorer.

Finest facilities for FISHING, Sailing, Gunning, etc.

The Liquor Traffic and its kindred evils are forever pro-

hibited by deed.

Every lover of Temperance and Morals should combine to help us.

Water Supply, Railroad, Steamboats And all other Modern Conveniences.

Thousands of lots for sale at various prices, located in all parts of the city. For information apply to

E. B. LAKE,

Secretary, Ocean City Asso'n, SIXTH ST. & ASBURY AVE.

Flagging & Curbing. GET THE BEST STONE FLAGGING and CURBING Never wears out. No second expense. For terms and contracts consult Robert Fisher, my agent for Ocean City. DENNIS MAHONEY.

D. S. SAMPSON, DEALER IN Stoves, Heaters, Ranges,

PUMPS, SINKS, &C., Cor. Fourth Street and West Avenue, OCEAN CITY, N. J. Tin roofer and sheet-iron worker. All kinds of Stove Casting furnished at short notice. Gasoline Stoves a specialty. All work guaranteed as represented.

FINNERTY, McCLURE & CO.,

DRUGGISTS AND CHEMISTS 112 Market Street, Philadelphia. Dealers in Pure Drugs, Chemicals, Patent Medicines, Paints, Oils, etc.

H. GERLACH & CO.,

DEALERS IN Clocks, Watches, Jewelry & Diamonds, 2631 Germantown Avenue, PHILADELPHIA, PA.

Watches, Jewelry, etc., skillfully repaired.

Articles or orders left with H. Gerlach, Sixteenth and Asbury, Ocean City, will receive prompt attention.

ISRAEL G. ADAMS & CO., Real Estate and Insurance AGENTS,

2031 ATLANTIC AVE. Atlantic City, N. J.

Commissioner of Deeds for Pennsylvania. Money to loan on first mortgage.

Lots for sale at South Atlantic City.

D. GALLAGHER, DEALER IN FINE FURNITURE, 43 So. Second St., PHILADELPHIA, PA.

WM. E. KERN. Civil Engineer AND Surveyor, Steelmanville, N. J. Special attention given to complicated surveys.

STODDART'S STORES. On Monday, August 28, 1893, we opened a branch store at 15 North Second Street, formerly occupied by the reliable old house of Kelly & Brown, having purchased their entire stock, and also added many lots bought at low prices now current, we are in a a position to offer many bargains in all kinds of dry goods. The convenience of this store to the different ferries has made it popular with people passing to and fro, and to residents of Camden and Central and Southern New Jersey.

Our efforts will be to make it even more attractive than in the

past, and it will be to the interest of those not familiar with the

store to make its acquaintance, and those of its old patrons to

continue, intending to deserve the patronage of its old friends and many new ones.

THE STODDART COMPANY,

The Old Second Street Dry Goods House, 448, 450, 452 NORTH SECOND STREET,

AND BRANCH STORE, 15 N. Second Street, East Side, Above Market, PHILADELPHIA.

THE OCEAN CITY SENTINEL. SUBSCRIPTION, $1.00 PER YEAR

OUTSPOKEN AND FEARLESS A LIVE NEWSPAPER PITHY NEWS ITEMS A HOME PAPER NOTE HEADS LETTER HEADS BILL HEADS ENVELOPES, ETC

POSTERS, DODGERS PRINTING IN ALL ITS BRANCHES

GREAT BARGAINS IN SPRING AND SUMMER CLOTHING, Hats, Caps and Gens Furnishing Goods, AT M. MENDEL'S RELIABLE ONE PRICE STORE. 1625 ATLANTIC AVENUE, ATLANTIC CITY, N. J.

Children's Nobby Clothing a Specialty. A Banjo Souvenier Given Away with every Child's Suit.

C. A. CAMPBELL, 813 Asbury Avenue IS THE LEADING DRY GOODS AND SHOE STORE In Ocean City. New line of SHOES just from the factory at $2.00, $2.25, $2.50, and $3.00. Come and see them. It is wonderful how we can sell such Shoes at such prices, but we do.

Also, great bargains in Ladies' Oxford, and Men's Russet Shoes reduced 20 per cent. And don't forget we take orders for SUITS from samples.

WM. R. ELLIOTT, Successor to MRS. R. MORRIS,

DEALER IN Groceries, Provisions, CANNED GOODS, Dry Goods, Notions, Shoes. A FULL LINE OF CHINA and GLASSWARE, No. 714 Asbury Ave., OCEAN CITY, N. J. Summer visitors are assured of efficient service, fresh goods and Philadelphia prices.

HENRY A. W. SMITH, Practical Plumber and Sanitary Engineer. R. HOWARD THORN, Manager, 805 ASBURY AVE., Ocean City, N. J.

SMITH & THORN, Plumbing & Gas Fitting, In All its Branches.

Satisfaction guaranteed. Underground drain-

age. Terra Cotta Pipe, Wholesale and Retail.

King's American Laundry, Asbury Ave., below Fourth St., OCEAN CITY, N. J. All work done in first-class style. MRS. ANNA KING, Proprietress. Y. CORSON, DEALER IN FLOUR AND FEED, No. 721 Asbury Avenue, OCEAN CITY, N. J. Samuel Schurch, PRACTICAL BUILDER, MAY BE FOUND AT Bellevue Cafe, On beach bet. Seventh and Eighth Sts.

Railroad Time-Tables. PHILADELPHIA & READING R. R. ATLANTIC CITY DIVISION. TO AND FROM PHILADELPHIA. Two Ferries--Chestnut Street and South Street. SHORTEST ROUTE TO NEW YORK. In effect February 15, 1893. LEAVE ATLANTIC CITY. DEPOT--Atlantic and Arkansas avenues.

FOR PHILADELPHIA. WEEK DAYS.

8:15 a m accom. arrive Phila. 10:15 a m 7:00 a m express " " 8:35 a m 7:45 a m express " " 9:05 a m

9:00 a m express " " 10:30 a m

3:30 p m express " " 5:05 p m

4:30 p m express " " 6:40 p m

5:30 p m express " " 6:50 p m SUNDAY. 7:14 a m accom. arrive Phila. 9:25 a m

4:00 p m express " " 5:35 p m 4:30 p m accom. " " 6:55 p m 8:00 p m express " " 9:20 p m

4:30 p m accom. " " 6:55 p m 8:00 p m express " " 9:20 p m

FOR BALTIMORE AND WASHINGTON. Trains leaving Atlantic City week-days 9 a m and 3:30 p m. Sunday 7:15 a m, and 4:00 p m connect with express trains for Baltimore and Washington, via B & O R R from Twenty-fourth and Chestnut streets, Philadelphia. Street cars direct from Chestnut street Ferry to B & O depot.

FOR NEW YORK.

8:15 express, arrive New York, 12:50 p m

3:30 p m express " " " 8:25 p m

LEAVE NEW YORK. WEEK DAYS.

4:30 a m express, arrive Atlantic City, 10:10 p m

1:30 p m " " " " 6:35 p m

Pullman parlor cars attached to all trains. Time at Philadelphia is for both Chestnut street and South street wharves. Time at Atlantic City is at depot. All express trains are run over Baltic avenue extension. For time at avenues, see detailed tables. Reading R. R. Transfer Co. and Cab Service Passengers and baggage promptly conveyed. Branch office New York Atlantic avenue, where calls for baggage can be left and tickets and time tables of the Reading Railroad and branches can be obtained. I. A. SWEIGARD, Gen. Man. C. G. HANCOCK, Gen'l. Pass. Agent.

WEST JERSEY RAILROAD. On and after July 1, 1893. Leave Philadelphia--Excursion 7:00, mixed 8:20, express 9:10 a m; accommodation 2:30, express 4:20 p m. Sunday--Express 7:00, accommodation 7:10, express 8:50 a m. Arrive Ocean City--Excursion 9:28, mixed 11:20, express 11:18 a m; accommodation 4:47, express 6:33. Sunday--Excursion 9:49, accommodation 10:35, express 11:03 a m; accommodation 6:35, 10:17 p m. Leave Ocean City--Mixed 6:15, express 6:25, accommodation 9:45 a m; mixed 2:00, express 4:55, excursion 5 p m. Sunday--Accommodation 8:55 a m; accommodation 3:33, express 5:20, excursion 5:40, accommodation 8:45 p m. Arrive Philadelphia--Express 8:40, accommodation 10:40 a m; mixed 4:55, express 7:10, excursion 8:10 p m. Sunday--Accommodation 10:33 a m; accommodation 5:50, express 7:30, excursion 8:10, accommodation 11:05 p m.