P^T" ' .-jniUMIIHII 1 1 1 1 II 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f " Easy Honors : V i By Osborn Jones mmmhUi? MIciL1. ; Bbere »nt Tom Tatoe,_nnd Larry Jooee. Brewster Uodgca, Carter Webb. Joora Pread and Bill Dan-son — all assembled In Bin Daweous room one evening: the entire class of Doctor Martinson's mathematics' 1SS>— all <xN «l* "the «lrl-— she made the seventh. \ "Well, If no one else will, "why I , V Suppose I most," sakmill. the spokes- . -> man. with an etni^nisis on the "sttpIpoqe" that Indicated how great his sarriflee. "Ton fellows hadn't any Intention— any one of yon— of taking a hand. Too cooked It op that 1 was to be the goat" * , "Aw. can that" was Larry Jones' aha wouldn't look at us. Fact Is I tried to kid her a little toward the first — Just for the fun. of it — but n»y .freckles and my pug nose stood In the way. You're the lady killer, you know yoa arw. You can do, If The fact was that It had been decide* that one of the six men In the class should cultivate the Acquaintance of the one girl In the class— with object. If not matrimony, at least some sort of courtship. It was a drastic seeded. For a decade Martinson's aatbemhtlc* 139 bad been the test for {ha winning of a certain very desirable cash price in a large dty college. Students In the engineering course were eligible for the price and the fact that the price was awarded to the stndent baring the best grades In one of the advanced courses In mathematics, instead of engineering, was not to the liking of the students who wished to compete for It. Martinson, being one of the younger, more serious profes- H •era. made his course extremely dlffl- b, cult— the thousand dollars left by the benevolent one as a reward for high eat credit In that course, it was felt, j*
was wall earned— so difficult had Msrteeoo. cqstrived to make the course. Bot this had. Inconveniences ; so vrtthle thb past totir or five years there ■art of the student* who wished to compete for the price— and -no one took, the course except with ibat Idea *p mind that the price would be dlvMcd among -them. It was also •■reed that as it didnt really matter. Wtth. this arrangement which man Meal highest, no very Intense studylag ahonld be done. So. the course >»c#Me on# of the roore comfortable C^are^wbeve the men enjoyed contotojjr of a share of,Jhe booty at the •d. Bat this jtst -after everything Jtoto arranged and It had been agreed Inrry Mould do Just enough more *■* than his companions to be sure • df taklnt off the prise that was later V -If a* divided among them, the girl nrllvad. Proflnaut Martinson -had been to nddreas her as Mlap Baxter— ;to*» ,w«B Rll that w^ known of her. •y she was Dot at all bad lookME and— what was at first orach more jjMjNMBi she was a Mark matbemafrrian with a mania for mental appllfa™ *• *<»» WHycmthe prise and generally tarn tte asatwhil* peaceful aearioos of the , j— Into mental combats If some "tag m not done to qnell her enIkaMaaai. No gtri had ever been known ■ <t a take engineering before-ln fact a . had to be gained from J .*•?■■■ to admit her. it was later un- - JjJB* «■* was am an Indtiposiaon ' Ml tha part of the man to lore their I •eMy-*r they wetid never have tak- \ •mas# c* gaining this reward— but it ' ".MtulM the grain of each one to are a -glriiwmb off so eerily wlm hon- «(• Mat anyone at them might. If *" "™|™- "" _*T11 tril yon what" It was Bin ' Mwreato nggretioe a day or to be-' ' five the conference la his room. "If ' ree5lS1he^£og«oiiKdetr,C,re<1 caaM piirenfli her that tbwT re ' •rem dhr career ahead of her be- , dMw that of studying engineering jdie [ wonldn t use such mental gymnastics • trying to Mow up our stupidity. , I nm MM Ufa got to be done." . "Ton mean that tree of tu might get J ■rgnalnlsd and then propose to bar or ; »^»thliig of that sort?" asked Larry J •"Wi thaPa about tt. I've beard in f regMar eo-edoratioaal colleges that [ SB aooo as the girts begin to get en--»Md to the men-and all the good J lookers asnaDy do. yon know. In their , " "reoler year-why they begin to think '' ' taa about their marks and grades." Bo ft was agreed and later Bill was v . •WPMBtad to tV taak and. still rebel- ' Jtare. ha lretatsui on i,«viv,. ■->. P ha on
yre.. lomy — anubwoaed. freckls '•read Larry — drew the curd that appelated Mm aa the victim. At least he hod declared his admiration for her and had gone ao far aa to open the .door for her on several occasions. And Larry went to his tank with •tout delay and with no further rebel lion, although be felt singularly baudi copped by bU freckles and pug nose, I. StXtor sometime* after class and esreatad bar away from the college Wdagi to the direction of the car Itoa inestimably he taw her borne, •dftarn month a meeting was called to Ufa rooms. Evidently whatever oto a Larry had convinced her be had ftotriMeinced her to give np her raplddra mantel actirity in the classroom. , Unjk report was not entirely sat■"»nj Mr was It devoid of reasons to* tops. "I think aha llkea me." he tore Mmgriy. "but I'm dare sure she to? dogMad. and though Ma's nice *to MiMj. tbsre'd bare to b* con.todmoklo mara aoft music to lead me to a yaapoaaL Tre done my best '.•re Ml that has happened Is that I've •J"**® 00 moot girls talk about dances jtod hrere fireltoa. ni tell yon she's ^yjjto ™ dissension la camp aftar
u Mfe ana Thai "The fliStMBB 1rerk-rf I r ; mathematics was conducted on an in- '■ c creaalngly brisk level. "It's like hav- | ' Ing an Ice-cold needle tpray applied to . ' your brain." said Larry, "to go to that | ; class now; and once It was the most ; ■ ■ comfortable hour in my s<bedule.n ! * It was Just before mid-year exaroln- ® ■ ntlons that the company was again z. I assembled In Bill's rootn. It had been ■ felt absolutely essential that someone * ! should do something to sidetrack Miss i " • • Baxter before the examination. Other- r1 . . wise much cramming would have tm lie | . ; Indulged In In an effort to keep her J , !, from taking first place and going off " ;; with the prize. . 111 The men sat grumpy and silent till •f Bill raising his voice, said "Somebody's j, got tq propose to her before examlna- ' b' -j- tiona and somebody's got to make ber i b, give np taking the examination. s- WhoU it be? Larry, she likes you ' ' ^ pretty well. You do It; If you're Just to ,r persistent enough you'll laud her." I w(. Larry sniffed with disgust. "I sup- . i pore you think you were the only one j j who thought we'd got to propose to T . . ' * ^ . "i toll " iltJ'iHl J i J i6* ' TUKfi •? ' fiP - lirHF liHi |S i ■ 1 (/.' dime ! WKtm- ~ l in* t nair
■ /'II f i iftlf, Had Gone to Far aa to Open the Door, her. Well, as It happened I did propose to her — " and there was another sniff that dearly marked him as re-
lr* A silence followed and then Carter Webb, having plucked np < courage, h muttered savagely. ro 1 proposed yesterday— she wouldn't to have me." "Great Scott" said Pread, holding a M congratulatory hand out "I did too, "* and she gave me the mitten. 1 guess 11 ' It's np to BUL"' M Larry straightened himself to hie v. full height So use," he said. "She ra toid me the whole story. Martinson T played the trick on us. He knew we " wouldn't let a girl get ahead of ne ao * he got her to come In. He's been "• tutoring her every day so as to keep r her ahead and — and. well, she told me " that aha was going to marry Martinis son. And she's going to take the ex <1 ami nation. Here's three cheers for the "* girl that made ns study and here's "* hoping every man In the class will * beat her." r And BUI Dawson's room resounded ® with the cheers of the then of mathe- - matlca 188. r. t- An Edltorie Fondest Hime. * On the twenty-seventh anniversary [' of the founding of the New -York Tribnne Its editor expressed himself In a paragraph that begins like a veritable 0 quotation from "Poor B1 chard" and In " lta conclusion shows Horace Greeley 6 at hU best: ' Fame Is a vapor, popularity an accident, riches take wings, the only earthlj certainty U oblivion. No man can ■ foresee what a day may bring forth, while those who cheer today will often curse tomorrow. And yet I cherish the hope that the Journal I projected ' and established will live and flourish _ l°ng after I ahajl hare moldered Into " forgotten dust, being guided by a larger wisdom, a more unerring sagacity * to discover the right though not by a more unfaltering readiness to embrace " and defend It at whatever personal , cost; and that the stone which coven my ashes may. bear to future eyes the still Intelligible Inscription. "Founder J of the New York Tribune." [ India's indigo Crop. " The second official estimate of In1 dla'e 1917-18 crop of Indigo, published recently, shows a total area so far re- ; ported «ff 21,191X100 acres aown. This _ Is 17 per cent larger than the estimate made at this 0m» last year. The ln- ' which M said to be due to the high prices obtained last year and to [ favorable conditions at sowing time, is ' noticeable In all of the provinces ao far beard from with the exception of which shows a decrease at IS ' per cent. The crop has been adversely affected by excessive rain In many parts of northern, western and central . India, particularly In Gujarat (Bom- , the United Provinces, jtjmerMerwsra. Hyderabad, and In many of the central India and Bajputana states. the present condition and ; prospects of the crop are reported to prospects oi ine
^ be generally good. > An Oif song. rt "The Bostoolana" are remembered t and will loos be remembered from one le end of the country to the other for many pleasant things, but more parJ tlcularly for Henry Clay Barnabeo's 1 characterization of the sheriff of Not1 ttngham. and for Jessie Bartlett Davis* V rendering "Oh. Promise Me." That song was. to the nineties, what John " McOormark's "I Hear You Calling Me" e has been to the present period, r "Oh. Promise Me" for a whole deci nde. was hummed and whistled, hs i weU as sung. In evrt-y nook sad corr ner of the land, and wherever Jessie 1 Burtlet Davis appeared, no matter !- what she had to offer, she wonld not be excused until she had sung ibat - song. — Christian Science Monitor. f Concentrate at the Traps. , Yon can give a man a gun, you may ; supply him with unlimited ammunl- . lion and targets, and let him t»«ng . aw ay HI the cows come home— but j you'll never make a trap ahot of him , until you have taught Mm to concen- ; trate. says Outing. Concentration Is ; rather an Important habit ta enlllvate. whether you are rrtmnmftng | railroad, or sMnlr.g aboea — hut to the man wbo would succeed at the traps. It la vltM He must forget Ms aapmodliiga. Ma score, his neighbor oMthe platform, himself— everything tm short, except that the target wlfi aafl from the trap whra he -calls "punr Let Ms mind wander tor ao mach as a aecaed an* toMatts ^sre^t ha will bars a
b* PROBLEM IN PICTUR^ And the Wiselier .Coincidence by Which It Was Solved. Some yeera ego a publishing bouse j preparing to Issue a new edition 1 of the writings of Tborenu, write* Charles 8. Olrott in Art sod Progress The bead of the bouse and a member ; the method of illustration. It wns agreed that the pictures must be true ! the problem. Artists wbo do book !1- ' lustra ting could not be expected to go I which would tn any way assist the Photographs would be admirable. I but wbere one the profeealonal photog i rapher to be found who- would under- I take to go liito'J'liorpiwi s country, in sunshine and rain, fnsummer and win to catch all the ; hsses of nsthre Tboreau reconlt-d In his "Jour j H'hlle the two men pondered a caller ' ■at In the outer office with a large port- j folio under his arm Five years before I be bed read Tboreau'e "Journal" and - bed taken op bis residence In Codcord . Ihst be might vlstt the scenes there I lescrtbed. In all seasons and all kinds >f weather be had wandered through j ' he woods and ovpr the fields with ' ds camera. PassIouktiSy- fond of nsure. he wa» no lAa- devoted to art. J \> Mm photography Was a pastime : I wae not his profession. For the 'ore love of nature aDd of art and 1th uo thought of pecuniary gain he ad accomplished the very feat wMcb le two business men bad thonght so I KBcult. and by a curious coincidence • appeared at the office to 'exhibit »e resulj of his work at the precise- r, oment when lta desirability was be- o: g b < -f-
c BURIED LIVING PERSONS. ^ \ ; Horrible Cuotem of Jspeneee Prior to . I Year 64C A. a '"I Prior to the year #46 A. D. the Japs , o»e bad one of the most horrible bur- els ial customs that can be Imagined— that *l : of burying all the Immediate friends "V and retainers of a prince or other per bo' too of note in a standing position around the potentate's grave and leav ^ ing them in the earth up to their necks P'fl to perish of thirst sod hunger. toe The custom cannot be said to bare " ■ been general as late as tbe date given. . for the Japanese records prove that In tote r the time of the Emperor Bulnln <97-80 Ma B. C.) the burial rile# of royal person ages were so modified as to partial It cs»
r abolish former cruelties. Speaking of ^ a young brother of Sulnln. who died "• and had his retinue buried standing , around his grave, tbe old record says: "Far many days they died not. but , wept and cried akrad. At last they , died. Dogs and crows assembled and , at#- off their heads. The' emperor's compassion was aroused, and be de sired 'to change tbe manner of burin L Wben the empress died. 'soon after, the mikado inquired of his officers if soma t thing In the way of a change could ' not be suggested, and one proposed to nuke clay figures of men and burj them as substitutes." That this did not entirely do awsy ■ with the farmer custom Is proved by en edict loaned in the year 646 A. D_ ' . the date given first above, which for ' bade th* burial of living perapns an d ' provided a penalty for fnfther adher enca to the awful rite.— 8h Louis Ee- , public. Ltfs Without Microbes. Microbes ore not indispensable to all 4ffe If the*- are Indispensable to any. r Tbe question has been definitely set- . tied. A cage completely sterilized at , 90 degrees eras nude and tbe open- , lags of the cage closely slopped with | cotton and protected from the outside , by a hermetically closed meUllic chamber. Bach manipulations as were necessary tn opening the cage were made by bands guarded by aseptic rubber doth. Into such a sterilized cage three toes' eggs were placed after having been externally sterilized. The cage was fitted with a glass pavilion or chicken run. wbere the chickens could develop during their six weeks' sojourn in the cage, in tbe cage were sterilized air. pare water, sterilized sand and sterilized feed. Tbo experiment showed that life does not depend upon microbes. but that the vital work of the organism la easy and natural when everything la sterilized Harper's. Relics of Pilleriee. Though the pillory has been abolish- . ed. there are still to be found In various parts of rural England relics of ' this old time method of punishment One of the most complete examples ! may be seen within a few miles of the metropolitan ybprder. In the picturesque village of Roydon. Essex, not , only are the old stocks and whipping J post still preserved, but close beside them stands also the wooden "cage" In which the roysterer of bygone days was Incarcerated. Is there another such Interesting trio of punltiTe relics 1 to be found elsewhere In England?— 1 London GrapMc. j The Deep 8#s Lead. j In order to find a ship's poiltior , when approaching the land In a fog soundings are token with tbe "deep sen , lead." This lead weighs twenty-eight , pounds and is attached to a line which , is marked off in fathoms by bunting o! , 0 is marseu ra in ratdomi by bunting
vnrlouj colore, pieces of leather nixl knots. Bored In the base of the'lenS Is a bole about two Inches deep, nnd d this la Oiled with tallow, so that tin • gravel or shells at tbe bottom- will ad r here to It. and tbe uatup-df the bed n- may be thus ascertained When the s lead la theqwn overboard the water', t- depth U noted on the line, and this and * the adherence to the tallow wbeu com it pared with the description given on n the chart will give the ship's ;ioslUon with tolerable accuracy. " Sibilant Praiss. » One of the ushers approached a man wbo apjteared to be auuoylng those c about him. ' "Don't you like the show?" ' "Yes. Indeed." 1 "Then why do yon persist In hlsxlng tbe performer*"/" "Why. m-rnan alive. I w-wssn't f b-Msslng. I w-was s-sslmply i-t-s-aay tug to 8-s-s-sammle that the s-M-slng t tug Is s-s-s-su|*rb."— Judge. t - — 1 Hadn't Seen Him. The Vicar -l*ld you aee a pedestrian , pass thU way a few minutes ago? Farm Hand -No. sir. I've becu workL •»' on this later patch more'u a nower. I an' notter thing ha« passed Vept , 1 > solitary man. an' he wa. trampln' on 1 ■ London Telegraph. 1 Good R OS son. > Mrs. Wright (to vicar's w!fei-Wh< j la your hualatml always asking for ?°00g- n":nr>' ""'to*1 Vicar's Wlft | l (wrarilyi-I presume lt"a because he , «sU mgr. (
j MURKY GREEN pETROI^UMe I Processes by Which It Is Converted Into Rtfinod Oil. " In Its original state petroleum la of a 10 | murky green color It la distilled in i • ! pans with great furnaces blazing tie- ; • ' neath them, and ns the vapors arise 'r from the boiling liquid they are coaj veyed into ptpes surrounded by cold J ' tha and those produced by further, heating give the burning oil. A very I I I Into the pans or stills remains in the 5 J form of tar. which by another process r ; is converted Into paraffin and coke. • I After dlatJilation the refined oil is do | longer green, hot la as transparent as. ' ' ( spring water and beautlfuHy tinged 1 j with -purples and bluea. It Is not yet be "washed." The fluid la emptied Into j a large circular tank In which It Is j treated with acids, these being poured ' I In and mixed with It by means of pow- ' | erful pressure from beneath. " j allowed to settle, and tbe acids th'eh ' ] separate from It and sink to the bot- i torn <if I he tank, taking «lth them i] The scl.ls are then remo>ed and the u tt'u bl^.^d P 'Lu^JZ'tr P the market.-Uarp-.-rs Vtjnkly. - A TIGER PROOF HOMES. -Houses. Frail and Flimsy - Sometimes Perch m Tre. Tops. The ordinary Malay house Is built on one which I came a.-rros was per. bed a man. his wife and family, and the. me that It .Was placed In if: - III way of 1be nuroerour tigers which then i"nl Infested the neighborhood. eighteen feet in vertical height some jJJ where alraut twenty feet Is considered . i O be the limit of safety. Tbe Malnrnn louse is a frail and flimsy structure of im iticka tied together with rattan thatch Waited bamboo or. as In. (bis case, «lt» It Is therefore an easy matter for s Iger with Its greattstreugth to break iabi ato a bouse and attack the Inhabitants Jany Instances of this bi)ve been re l>i orded In Melayo. In one well known ase a wbole family were klllcff except uo/ j case
j one man. who. climbing up Into tin ) roof and thus escaping tfcercotlc-e of l the tiger, was a horrified observer ut • the cruel mauling and ultimate slaugb t ter and devouring of bis relatives— r London Strand Mngazlne. J ■ The Andromtas Nebula. One of the roost astonishing objects In the heavens is the great nebula In 9 the' constellation Andromeda, which Is - visible as a misty speck tw the naked > because, while Us structure— a series of vast rings surrounding s central ' lis spectrum is continuous, resembling that 'l' 'dm *1 " " ,11S be"' sui:K"itea • stitutlng a universe external to oura. P Studies of Us luirallax. however indicate that It Is nearer to us than some ■ of tbe weU known stars, such as Capella. and Gore, the English astronomer. points out that if the Andromedrf nebula were assumed to be an external I universe, having a diameter comparable With that of tbe Milky way. its . mass would be forty million minion - million times the mass of the sun. This . is regarded as Incredible and so may i be taken as an additional argument In i favor of the view thnt this nebula is s member of our system.— Harper1* > Won of tha Prompter. In tbe production of a play there is an lm;>ortant person who is never seen and should Hot be beard by the audi 1 enee. and yet he may speak more Tines ' than the principal actor. It la the prompter. Here Is a description of a prompter's labors, written by one of the genus: "I. aa prompter, bad been kept very busy throughout the piece. In addition to keeping the actors on their lines It was my duly to make aU the outside noises. I had screamed 'Help? I had abouted 'Kill hlmr I had dropped plabks to cover up deficient pistol reports. 1 had thundered, balled, rained sung Uke a woman, marched lie an ; array and bowled like an. Infuriated ■rabble Inflated liy drink. Tbe last ■ straw came wben the hero, supposed' to be pursued by hounds, sidled to the wing* and hissed: "'Bark, you fool, lark! -Why don't ; you lark, you Idiot? Cincinnati ; Commercial Tribune. -Origin of the T RaiL Robert Livingston Stovens sailed from New York to Liverpool before the advent of the ocean steamer. In those days the passage took two months, nnd Stevens pasgd many an hour. JackIn onerannd and a phve of wood to the other, brooding over a problem thnt bad often worried him- how to run n railroad without stone at ringers for tracks. He wanted to get nn Iron rail that would "hold" and would take the place of the thin strips fast.-ned to the chair of the roadbed. Just be- — .-v ...... ... ruauueo. JUKI De-
fore he reached England his whittling J revealed to him the solution of his problem, and that solution took the 4 form qf a T rail with a broad base that . """Id to applied direct to a solid wood 0 support. That T rail Is still In use on 4 all the railways of the world. 13 The E chess of Eagle's Nest. 1 The mo<t wonderful echo In the n known world Is that heard from the 0 Eagle s nest In tbe lake regions of Ireland. The rock known as Eagle's nest la the most prominent peak to be found among the heights that surJ round the Klllarney lakes Its ai>cx la ' 1.230 feet above the surface of the water, and the extraordinary echo I* heard to the best advantnge from a spot 100 feet to the west from an open1 Ing called the Devil's mouth. At that point the effect of the re-echoed sounds l Is absolutely startling, the slightest Whis;>er being repeated a* often as 1.000 times. Tbe rebound Is always clear and distinct and appears to come from the ciags. cliff* and peaks wlilcb surround the experimenter ou all sides Th# Limit* "Miss Pry Is the most Inquisitive sort #f girl. There is nothing doing but she manages to have ber finger In ltr "1 notice she hasn't got the finger In an engagement ring yet"— Baltimore American. Safe Ground. Srtr? big millionaire likes to tag how be got his first thousand doUam." I ^2*JjMtoj#^jstu"y on —ft gtoMff
ijiteal Estate and * Search Company ' :1 Fideii™ tocanv A RE Vou usin£ Edison Mazda Lamps ? If ■ „ not, why not? The/ give three times 7 Wildwood Title and Trnsi , , ,, ,. / , „ "les - Titieinsuranc, as much light as the old style Carbon lamn<; Searches, Abstracts of Title, ' . " conveyancing for the same current consumption. . r : Fire Insurance N ^ ■ | ocean city electric service Offices in i of Atlantlc c,ty Ei®ctrlc Company J First Nationl Bank Building | . , Cape May Court House j — t N. J.
| BOSCHEE'S SYRUP I Will quiet your cough, soothe the In flstijiiiBtiuu of a core throat and lung* •top Irritation in the brouchlal tube* lururlng a good ujght * re-t free from coughing and with easy expectoration in I he morning Made and -old" In building up your general health and throw ing oil' the dieease. K-pecially bronchitis, etc. For rale by Abbott's Advertise in the SENTINEL Notice.
b< rax rn-m or^rEg MRS °* Public Notice. b t is ( — ^Landing 'roiS' and opened at a regular meetlnx'oftheltoiLrd to roStBou'i.H? Sr/'/li"' '"'' =l^™|Hihl£uonto^ m"r£? ^ obtained ° ' oSaLot i"**W °£mu" toed chec?d'n«wnTto Utr Ig i be «t!cre*»ful bldder'wlll'be reqidred"u)' fn"/! Kl r •0r"?YM»topSBy bond for tbe Ian »■ .u SiJSl' *: or I£l»S""-"v-toer|gbt to rejee, any Le ' By order of fW Hoard, Dated No, ' W' B- ,T'-»-»..P r,S3». *- ,1 Meetings of the Cape May County f- Board of Taxation to Hear Appeals. T CI,y'Cltr 1 H " i?aic' all?. ' Frl^y.N^^^SwiS-fMmdleTownablp. I May SSd How Bulldlnz, lane I V I '• w' ^'Titoll.* pmm. m 4 pDmn' i * HalT'in*,t2?1»I!rM'iW8— **°n Horoogh I " T to"ouSj ■ P- m'uf« p"mB' Harbor. I * WtoDtoodCr^ i'Si 1 - L* Hall, Mildwood. 10a. m torn m i i ???T'i^c*515*r3-,»ltt-LowerTo!r'nablp, 1 r i2 K ttV/^S,v50,,iyipe wiii t S're M.VcT^, li'Fj'Zi olm" M""' , Appeal, muai be m de on form. fnrnl.bad bv , -hlbertc. linxbe*. ci^.V. I &ar,,cSss?'(""isa-» ' ■ Lowabol Bros. ( of Taxation. « e u ti.SU.P F. yg C- Hconza, becretary. e ' City of Ocean City : , A STATEMENT / ^ of the I *n$.Di,bur»ementa of the City S s - °"tnnC'^ togcther with a SuJ n of the Proceeding, of the Board . t Oc,: ^-"—•"ti.emonti.'of 1 SUMMARY OF THE PROCEEDINGS * OF THE J BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS B I Jj ' Haver October T, IRIX c ' .vTiSi^ or Champion reported having ooc- w i UiiS. ■"Perlnlendenl or ibewlty. W dn^j "«^WM°Tnnnebxa,ep£ieml*Tb* " I ran I ^"cl o.lMot*tbS aeSooun2?'thi? IhSi" " l USlrtTJ^'.Ciebi2D r?4?"#. Development! ! I) would I* welched clnaely. however, and Ibe I "I ' toIrs»^toa« qaujaiy^anro£b "* b4*lu' ai Jluilding ioipeeUw°WIIUan, H Jobnaon I °' praaeuied bu report for toe month of Septem- I ber, ahowlng five building permlu uened as
,d I Bnanclug of Ibe i ourto'.lreet wharf^lracf I* and aJop"id° kntimrtr i? tOFtm" to j A. 'erolouon offered by Direet^thrmpbotl. ■ i and adopted. eu^burlB'd ibe borrowing of a tn build and onnrlrurt a bulkhead (lielng'a ! '• fi'f "" alley between Centred | * '"m XT D ' 11 * m tlr"° flr"1 j
r Mayor Champion called attooUon,'to'the ' divided bid* ""i"1 "" pMU'b "ffloer w— ao d?tiin?e«5i^ atTm.^ume Tm" ' peratlve to have tbe eervlrm o I a health 1 officer wlthtn In.tant call. Motion, bv mi " 1*/°r LWmpheti; rec. rated by Director ' ma^orwtth' '^er'to"*' ** K> the 1 Milror Champion reported having received r LJSS!!?1 from _"*• bondholder.' ' committer of the Ocean city Kioetrle Rail- , - way company. In which they — Bed an audl3 F rlduy of this weekT °f 4'om,n'"'OI1er» on 1 enure ting change, in the name of i- union Road. Ordered reoelved And fllrd. ""'OD : e^!?i2a,"M SftiP Z" .Fjraemed (or third j reading. Motion by Dlreetor Campbell. 1 ■eccnded by Director Adaina, that Ordinance i I {&"• to to"1 OTer ,or ln""» seuon. Car- | Ordinance No. 11! wa. preeented for third reading and paired by unanlmon. vote | Adjourned. October 2t, iuib ' Vloe^Preeldent Campbell reported Uiat.tbe ' Ocean city EtMm%a!lnytS2£raay ! in the ! ctty^uonthe^toro^nor Friday, October roodltioi^or raeTommrar waa'dLwi^d "Iffi 1 a public meeting Dion Id be called1!* The SSi ' tradlea IS ^ctt'y^Ordert.lng mrenITo"the i I appearing from natemenuof the com'tany'e mKg—'pen^! ^totion*by°Dl rect'o?*A dSmi SSifisrSfiLs1® : ' Raalgnatlon of Beatrice M. Townrend'aa. Bhlanl In tbe city collector', office, wa. ac- : , tn°w?lc?^5il '' by llfractor1 Adaml raatTbe" mmunfcaiion ' reoelved and hied, and that tbe matVlS ,, be referred to tbe eommlreioner of atreeta for IJ "<?t^tn£5^ai^MtlUed, "An ordinance I readlnga u , )[ 0lidJoSraed!D *moan>«- ' Dlr^or Adam. reporUd'tS.' " awarded to Glbb A Htepbcnaon it roe. inc ,lbe gravel of lhat'>'nortion"or *ciiMTti*^IJfnae 10 ° r'nlnU' 'or U". |0 awardedto E^rofn A 1 port*d lh>1 he had awns. s®vS&&3S , °' Kmr"n l""1 "IS tor S !S engfneer^forTeply toierred to ?ty A resolution o Aredty Dlreetor Campbell and adapted. autborUcd the oorrowlng oi , Onmicfng of Conlren No lus. "" Un,porary it* War " 'wb H- v, T*T,""r J" ^r Civil lot toe^ly A<UD" P~»bUd to UN ***__PTT'_°.'!? tor U"rd Motion by Director AdAmjU°M*)ond«il bv CWmpbell. thai the city clerk bTlm liu 'si b|d® nnBer Ordlo- lot Adjourned. CLAR|f||CE g City Clerk. JOt
City Treasurer's Statement S -orra RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS OF THE CITY OF OCEAN CITY. NEW JERSEY „ ''r010 to* ctoae of burineaB September to, lets, to the clone of btuineM ■ ictoU-r tt, ).i. ot Balance, SepUmbet », 1»I» IS V • WW ^ RKCKUTS. r- Rereaoe, Current Year sso » « Year tljj n 1 Bf!tapSj£iI:An"0lP*"oo Noten 12/£ S , 1- Bill. Syibilf '°*n* 0n,nolDg contraeu, L. Arts to T 1 ; "~r" zn.,, , " DISBURSEMENTS h BTltttTB. isE t . sz wS ss 1 IS Wm.JUatbortie "" \ c ' !3B M.^aaaa • *> \ ; g " as E f^V^Ototo'Ltw.Oo. Ig O 10*21 W.HIgbae toJJ X I 1MB William Baker "2 B If
_ STATCMtNT OF RCCtlFTS AND DlGBURGgMCWTG (Oontt.md, ^ lib I ISJS krU'wrll^n"7 * 00 Uie:|0Ob KrankSporila 1*2 of 10*31 John LI by - - JO JO tor ,ou= J H:Fox tan ' t.lt| a ™ ^ CONTlNtiKNT FUND. Ir* lotos JjJ 10407 R CurtlB Robinson ..i?" >11. 10400 John R Qrovae ln *0 I a 10*10 Wm. I* Uardlner «, *0 ray IIHIO Teo A l.uken. Co. I oto' ocean city lodger J * on MALAK1I6. " " »' litre Wm H.Campbell - S2 S Lii-S-B SS 7 i lots Clarence oi Ben!! - 10 00 "• 'jStl1 r.'ilreldaml""" * . ■» i*S II. FOLU'R A(ID LlFKUtlARDa. r> ' IS- * 4 to- )a *llSS JI™*1" ^'■Hcbock " gJJ i S -EsSwHr" 55 i|!:E SSS" |s s EI 5K8SSS™ »S !5? W.J. Macfarlan. !• ISS STSS-wreLaia 45 r 1 10*7. w. J. A — i nr i R. R. 6e. ® ^ T«« KIRK DEPARTMENT SilSS SSLBW&n. '22 " Ss i- ' Sti 8am n. 1 Cartiart J ^ h I LOW Wm. E. Devi. t IS JSwiiSS*00 - torn *- e : nota Reliance Vol. Fire Co No. t ,m 2 diss g&2fsrs2rA,&^ «s -{ass i-'ogg** MoVo^ '■ °°" js o ir 2 s " CITY HALL i\S HinS'rLbr'oa . is 1 1 10414 CbarlM B. Powell " J HEALTH BUREAU. J 10414 Cfcaria. a Powell - g ; • «h r BUILDING INSPECTION BUREAU. ijMOt. Wm. 8. Johnron , „ L .. , j GARBAGE COLLECTION, i : nag, Oaborn Coraon , v m - RUBBISH COLLECTION. itBUG Porter-Smith Co. n M BOARDWALK !!#£ «?Ww" Smftb"4" u"'Co- m* lta# A. Illgbee SS PRINTING. R. Corn. Robinson - - M 10401 R cnrtl. Hoblneou M Bl j ADVERT18ING. J !S*2 Th* Pcltodelphla Record - 10UI lona Rr Adam. SS — — . 06 00 LIGHT. 10404 Ocean City Electric Service " MSI 40 - Mil 41 INTEREST ON TEMPORARY LOANS. ; plm'JRu00- Co,n""miop sr? n 1041. Ootao city Title sod TrnM Co. 'S 8 MffiO. -WATER. 10400 Ocvsn City Weter Co. IK m PUBLIC OGMFOBT STATION. !®f?J Jtoeao City Electric Service mm tout c. H. Ha OOP 7 ff S si INTEREST ON IMPROVEHENT CKBT1FICATES. 122 <to«f OID Title and Treat On. mm iot» sinking Fond Oommlmloo |g £, INTEIiBST ON BONDB. iSJS ?S SS sinking Fund Uommimloa *■ — 711 M CONSTRUCTION TWELFTH STREET DBA1N. KTMsssar-" js 0417 ocean city Title and Trust Co. SS 104,6 Ooaen CUy Title nnd Treat on. to 71 CONSTRUCTION MUSIC PAVILION. JOtlJ Ocean City TiUe and Trasl Oo. MM* 1011. do do do u £ ■" • 40946 - 46
CONTRACT NO. 6N. imliJ °°rao City T1U. and Trnat Oo. us do do do is - ■ *46 CONTRACT NO. NR B .j;g SS Wm. H. Oolllmon , Jr. iS 2 low A. c. Townmnd ■ Z 6*7* DRAINS FIRST TO FIFTH STREETS. 1041. Ocean lily Title and Trait Oo. mil n 16 CONSTRUCTION FOURTH 8TBEET WHARF, Ocean City TIU. and TnutOo. u n CONDEMNATION PROCEEDINGS, Oemn CHy Title and Treat Oo. _ do do do BU — ■ mm Balanoa October »llri»liS*,'B™",n*BU' i!£ m ■kMIM BTATEMfNT OF THE RECEIPT* AND OIMURSEHENT* OF •CMOOL MONEYS Bepumber SO, 1911, ' rjlmn RECEIPTS. Current Bxpenm . m tmm mtmm B»BU«»E«~nR Enlarging, eto. ljmm — — WE v. cuMqAWni. mm". u«.M,r.Fe0Ui 5S8Sk0aMa«D«0

