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Chauncey M. Depew


CAt the Gateway to the Continent<br />

EVER serving the convenience of guests,<br />

Bowman Biltmote Hotels are located in<br />

New York around Grand Central Terminal<br />

—the transportation heart of New York<br />

and the gateway to the continent. Similarly,<br />

PROVIDENCE BILTMORE<br />

Providence, R. I.<br />

where society and sports activities center<br />

seasonally from Cuba to California, there<br />

will be found a Bowman Biltmore Hotel,<br />

the focal point in each locality for luxury,<br />

gayety and case of living.<br />

B o w m a n B i l t m o r e H o t e l s<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E BILTMORE<br />

HOTEL BELMONT<br />

ATLANTA BILTMORE<br />

Atlanta, Ga.<br />

SANTA BARBARA BILTMORE<br />

Santa Barbara, Cal<br />

t^eu> York<br />

BELLEVIEW BILTMORI1<br />

Belleair, Via.<br />

DUPONT BILTMORE<br />

Wilmington, Del<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E COMMODORE<br />

MURRAY HILL HOT! I<br />

MIAMI IIIITMORE<br />

Coral Ci.ibln, Miami, Fla.<br />

SI VII I A III)'I MOM<br />

Havana, Cuba<br />

LOS AN(.I I I S IIIITMORE<br />

Los Angeles, Cal.<br />

tfpw Huilding— Open 1928 - «. HAVANA BILTMORE YACHT & COUNTRY CLUB, Havana, Cuba<br />

DAYTON BILTMORE, Dayton, Ohio DETROIT BILTMORK, Detroit, Michigan<br />

B O W M A N B I L T M O R E H O T E L S , JohnM c<br />

BiteeBowman,preswe/w<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

G e n e r a l A m e r i c a n C a r C o m p a n y<br />

Designers • Builders • Lessors of Patented Milk Tank Cars<br />

General Offices: 940 Illinois Merchants Bank Building<br />

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS


N e w Y o r k C e n t r a l<br />

L i n e s M a g a z i n e<br />

N E W Y O R K CENTRAL BUILDING — 466 LEXINGTON AVENUE, N . Y.<br />

| Vol. IX | | MAY • 1928 J | No. 2 J<br />

Cover Photograph—Chauncey M. Depew,<br />

April 23, 1834—April 5, 1928<br />

Chauncey M. Depew, Chairman of the<br />

Table of Qontents<br />

Page<br />

Board, Dies at 93 of Pneumonia 7<br />

Chauncey M. Depew's Notable Career. ... 13<br />

Fighting for "Sassy" Bass in Northern<br />

and <strong>Southern</strong> Waters. By Eugene Shade<br />

Bisbee 20<br />

Eating to Live by Choosing Proper Foods.<br />

By Dr. G. Ellington Jorgenson 25<br />

Suggestions to Freight Warehouse Men<br />

on the Handling of L. C. L. Shipments.<br />

By D. J. Sheehy 28<br />

Two Judges Address Metropolitan Vet­<br />

erans at Banquet in New York City.. 29<br />

Traffic Department — National Parks<br />

Ready for Summer Season 31<br />

Agricultural Relations — Special Train<br />

Through Ohio and Michigan Stimulates<br />

Sugar Beet Industry. By E. J. Leenhouts 45<br />

Editorial—Chauncey Mitchell Depew... 54<br />

The Home Circle — Turning the House<br />

into a Home in Spring. By Carlo, Ryder 57<br />

P. E. CROWLEY. President,<br />

New York<br />

H. L. Ingersoll, Assistant to the President<br />

M. J. Alger, Executive Assistant to the<br />

President<br />

F. H. Hardin, Assistant to the President<br />

R. E. Dougherty, Engineering Assistant<br />

Curtis M. Yohe, Assistant to the President.<br />

A. H. Harris, Vice-President, Finance<br />

and Corporate Relations<br />

The New York Central Railroad Company<br />

(Including Ohio Central Lines)<br />

R. D. STARBUCK, Vice-President,<br />

New York<br />

Boston & Albany Railroad<br />

H. M. BISCOE, Vice-President,<br />

Boston<br />

The Michigan Central Railroad Company<br />

E. D. BRONNER, Vice-President,<br />

Detroit<br />

Fubl Economy Performances as Observed<br />

Page<br />

by Road Foremen of Engines 63<br />

Spouts<br />

Committees Named for Track Meet in<br />

Erie 66<br />

40 Major League Baseball Teams This<br />

Season. By William J. Morris 67<br />

New Roads Enter "Get Traffic" Cam­<br />

paign 76<br />

<strong>TH</strong>OUSAND at Second Annual Dinner of<br />

NEW YORK CENTRAL LINES,<br />

Executive Department<br />

G. H. Ingalls, Vice-President, Traffic<br />

R. J. Cary, Vice-President and General<br />

Counsel<br />

C. C. Paulding, Vice-President. Public<br />

Relations<br />

Jno. G. Walber. Vice-President, Personnel<br />

H. G. Snelling, General Treasurer<br />

W. C. Wishart, Comptroller<br />

E. F. Stephenson, Secretary<br />

The Cleveland, Cincinnati, Chicago &<br />

St. Louis <strong>Railway</strong> Company (Big Four<br />

Route)<br />

The Peoria & Eastern <strong>Railway</strong> Company<br />

The Cincinnati Northern Railroad Company<br />

Evansville, Indianapolis & Terre Haute<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> Company<br />

H. A. WORCESTER. Vice-President,<br />

Cincinnati<br />

Buffalo veterans , 78<br />

Sprightly tales from cab and caboose,<br />

No. 42—The Fakers. By George H. Wooding<br />

83<br />

RADIO—What the Manufacturers Offer-<br />

1—The Freed-Eiseman NR-60. By Irwin<br />

M. Frey 86<br />

Humorous Notes 88<br />

Saving Future Repair Bills by Building<br />

a Rust-Proof House. By L. Porter Moore 89<br />

Recent Deaths in the New York Central<br />

Family 101<br />

The Honor Roll 107<br />

A. H. HARRIS, Chairman of the Finance<br />

Committee, New York<br />

W. C. Bower. Manager, Purchases and<br />

Stores<br />

I. R. Smart. Manager, Dining Service<br />

E. C. Keenan. General Superintendent,<br />

Telephone and Telegraph<br />

E. H. Anderson, Manager, Agricultural<br />

Relations<br />

C. W.Y. Currle. Publicity Manager<br />

The Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad<br />

Company<br />

The Lake Erie & Eastern Railroad Company<br />

J. B. YOHE. Vice-President.<br />

Pittsburgh<br />

Indiana Harbor Belt Railroad Company<br />

Chicago River & Indiana Railroad Company<br />

T. W. EVANS, Vice-President,<br />

Chicago.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Compounded<br />

A n t i - F r i c t i o n S a v i n g s<br />

Crossings, rail joints and other track irregularities<br />

mean shock for the car journals.<br />

Curves, switches and clearance mean thrust.<br />

Railroad anti-friction bearings must be able<br />

to carry full thrust and shock and radial<br />

oads like Timken Bearings do—with<br />

their tapered construction, POSITIVELY<br />

A L I G N E D ROLLS, and Timken-made<br />

electric steel.<br />

Full thrust-radial capacity and greater load<br />

carrying area give Timken Bearings the<br />

endurance railroad bearings must have.<br />

Timken endurance compounds Timken<br />

anti-friction advantages—the 88% reduction<br />

in starting resistance—minimum lubricating<br />

requirements—elimination of hot<br />

boxes—freedom from constant maintenance,<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E TIMKEN ROLLER BEARING CO., CANTON, OHIO<br />

I P O M K L ]<br />

R O L L E R B E A R I N G S


4 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

=<br />

Page<br />

A<br />

Aaron & Bros., Inc., E. A 113<br />

Abt-Bernot, Inc 113<br />

Ackermann Ptg. Co., G. A. 112<br />

Acme White Lead & Color Works. ... 118<br />

Adirondack Inn 99<br />

Albany Car Wheel Company 126<br />

Albany Dairy Company 113<br />

American Creosoting Co 122<br />

Ashtabula & Buffalo Dock Co 127<br />

Ausable Chasm Hotel 99<br />

B<br />

Ballard, William M 124<br />

Barth, L., & Son, Inc 105<br />

Bowman Biltmore Hotels. . . Second Cover<br />

Breitenbach, C. J 113<br />

Brewer Dry Dock Co 122<br />

Brown Car Wheel Works. Inc 125<br />

Bruning Co., Inc., Charles 114<br />

Buckeye Steel Castings Co 118<br />

Buffalo Brake Beam Co 123<br />

Buffalo Slag Company 112<br />

Burdett Oxygen & Hydrogen Co. 112<br />

Byers Company, A, M 121<br />

C<br />

Camel Sales Company 114<br />

Chemical National Bank 106<br />

Citizens National Bank 108<br />

City Ice & Fuel Co 113<br />

Coleman & Co., Inc 115<br />

Coleman, Watson E 122<br />

Columbia Machine Works & Malleable<br />

Iron Co 122<br />

Columbus Bolt Works Co 117<br />

Commercial National Bank 110<br />

Consolidated Engraving Co 112<br />

Continental Casualty Co 108<br />

Copperweld Steel Co 122<br />

Crane's, Theo. A.. Sons Co. 119<br />

Crown Overall Mfg. Co 104<br />

D<br />

Darts Camp 99<br />

Dearborn Chemical Co 114<br />

Detroit Seamless Steel Tubes Co 122<br />

Dickinson, Paul, Inc. 122<br />

Dickson & Eddy 115<br />

Dietz Co., R. E 103<br />

Dominion Construction Co., Inc 124<br />

Dressel <strong>Railway</strong> Lamp & Signal Co. . . 112<br />

Duner Company 122<br />

Duquesne Steel Foundry Co 120<br />

El Retiro Inn 99<br />

Ellington Miller Company 124<br />

Enos Coal Mining Co 115<br />

Ewald Iron Co 119<br />

Farmers' Deposit Savings Bank Ill<br />

Ferguson & Edmondson Co 104<br />

Ferguson & Son, F 123<br />

Ferro Construction Co., The 100<br />

First Bank & Trust Co.. Utica 103<br />

First National Bank, Youngstown .... 110<br />

Flannery Bolt Co. 126<br />

Fort Pitt Malleable Iron Co 121<br />

Frampton & Co., D. B 124<br />

Franklin <strong>Railway</strong> Oil Co 123<br />

Furber & Co., E. L. 115<br />

to D V E R T I S E R S<br />

Page<br />

G<br />

General American Car Co 1<br />

General Equipment Co 123<br />

Geneva-by-the-River 99<br />

Gilkey Printing Co. W. S 110<br />

Glennmore Hotel and Cottages 99<br />

Goldstein & Lippman 113<br />

Gordon-Van Tine Company 105<br />

Gould Coupler Co 117<br />

Gould Storage Battery Co., Inc 118<br />

Govaert Company of America, Inc ... 98<br />

Graham Bolt & Nut Co 118<br />

Gregory, Mayer & Thorn Co 110<br />

Guillaume & Co., Inc 113<br />

H<br />

Hale & Kilburn Company 100<br />

Hamilton Watch Co Third Cover<br />

Hanna Company, M. A 101<br />

Hedstrom-Barry Co 101<br />

Hewitt Rubber Co 112<br />

Huntington Bank Building Ill<br />

I<br />

Indiana & Illinois Coal Corp 115<br />

Interstate Electric Co 112<br />

J<br />

Johns-Manville Corp 119<br />

Johnson Bronze Co 119<br />

Johnson & Son, B 122<br />

Joy Co., Edward 125<br />

Keystone Grinder & Mfg. Co 109<br />

Kniffin & Demarest Co 113<br />

L<br />

L. & M. Stone Co 112<br />

Lane & Son, John S 122<br />

Larus & Brother Co 107<br />

Lehon Company 119<br />

Lockhart Iron & Steel Co.. 112<br />

M<br />

Magnus Co., Inc 124<br />

Marcy-Buck Co., Inc 116<br />

Marine Trust Company Ill<br />

Mellon National Bank 108<br />

Miner, Inc., W. H 117<br />

Murine Eye Remedy Co 104<br />

N<br />

Nashville Tie Co 124<br />

Nathan Mfg. Co. ..' 120<br />

National Carbide Sales Corp 12,5<br />

National <strong>Railway</strong> Appliance Co 118<br />

Neely Nut & Bolt Co 114<br />

New England Coal & Coke Co. 115<br />

New England Construction Co 123<br />

New Kenmore Hotel 99<br />

Newtown Creek Towing Co 112<br />

New York Air Brake Co 126<br />

New York Car Wheel Co 117<br />

New York State National Bank 110<br />

North American Coal Corp 116<br />

Northern New York Trust Co 110<br />

O<br />

O'Brien Bros., Itc 123<br />

Oxweld Railroad Service Co 126<br />

Page<br />

P<br />

P. & M. Co 127<br />

Paige & Jones Chemical Co 114<br />

Pantasote Company, Inc 101<br />

Paramount Fuel Co 112<br />

Philadelphia & Cleveland Coal Co 116<br />

Pittsburgh Coal Co 117<br />

Pressed Steel Car Co 121<br />

Pursglove Coal Mining Co 116<br />

Pyle-National Co 127<br />

Q 44 C Company 119<br />

Quimby, J. L. Co 112<br />

Railroad Accessories Corp 104<br />

Railroad Co-operative Building & Loan<br />

Association 109<br />

Ralston Steel Car Company 128<br />

Ramapo Ajax Corp 114<br />

Redding Masonic Supply Company 108<br />

Rennolds & Bros., J. A 122<br />

Rochester & Pittsburgh Coal Co 116<br />

Royal Diamond & Watch Co 107<br />

S -<br />

Schaefer Equipment Co 128<br />

Scullin Steel Company 118<br />

Seamen Lichtenstein & Co., Inc 113<br />

Springfield Waste Co 105<br />

St. Thomas Bronze Co 117<br />

Standard Oil Co. of N. Y 102<br />

Standard Safety Nut Corp 120<br />

Standard Slag Co 122<br />

Standard Steel Car Co 100<br />

Stevens House 99<br />

Swan-Finch Oil Corp 122<br />

Symington Co., The 120<br />

Taylor Co., W. P 114<br />

Thatcher & Sons, John 124<br />

Thousand Islands House 99<br />

Thurston Company, D. W 123<br />

Timken Roller Bearing Co 3<br />

Todd Shipyards Corp 109<br />

Tolsma. George 113<br />

Tregarthen & Sons Co., James 122<br />

Trelfall & McLaughlin 122<br />

Tuco Products Corp 118<br />

Union News Co., The 113<br />

United Coal Sales Co 112<br />

United Hotels Co Fourth Cover<br />

V<br />

Victor Coal Co 116<br />

W<br />

Walsh Construction Co 125<br />

Wasson Coal Co 112<br />

Wheel Truing Brake Shoe Co 101<br />

Worcester Bank & Trust Co 110<br />

Wren Cottages 99<br />

Y<br />

Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Co 115


W o n d e r f u l M o d e l s o f N e w Y o r k C e n t r a l ' s N e w H u d s o n T y p e<br />

L o c o m o t i v e , N o . 5200, A v a i l a b l e at C o s t<br />

The Actual Model Base is 9% Inches Long<br />

There has just been produced a new model, 9% inches long, of the New York Central's remarkable new Hudson type<br />

locomotive, used to haul the Twentieth Century Limited and other limited trains. These models, which are supplied<br />

in various finishes, including colored enamels, silver plate and gold plate, make ideal ornaments and paper-weights for<br />

every railroad man. We know you will be delighted with these models, which are made to scale and are faithful repre­<br />

sentations, in every detail, of these new giants 96 feet long, the first 4-6-4 engines made in America.<br />

As the cost of presenting one of these to each employe is prohibitive,<br />

the Company has arranged, through the Magazine, to<br />

furnish these models at cost to every employe who desires one.<br />

Check or money order should accompany the order and the<br />

name and address should be printed clearly. The prices of the<br />

models are as follows:<br />

No. 1 Silver plate, oxidized $2.50<br />

No. 2 In color enamel 3.00<br />

No. 3 Gold plate 4.65<br />

Retail prices of these models and the price for which they will<br />

be sold to everyone except employes range from $5.00 to $7.50.<br />

SEND <strong>TH</strong>IS COUPON WI<strong>TH</strong> ORDER. No. Price<br />

Name<br />

Addrei<br />

City ...<br />

State<br />

Address, Editor, New York Central Lines Magazine,<br />

466 Lexington Avenue, New York City


Hfyt Jfattf) of © b a u n c e p JflL Bepeto<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

FAI<strong>TH</strong> by which a great man lived and achieved—the faith of Chauncey M. Depew<br />

—was made the subject of the sermon April 15, in St. Thomas' Episcopal Church, New York,<br />

by the Rev. Roelif F. Brooks, Rector. Eight days before, the funeral service of this indefatig­<br />

able leader, the Chairman of the Board of the New York Central, had taken place in the<br />

same church.<br />

The paragraphs which Mr. Brooks took as the theme for his sermon were the ones in which<br />

Mr. Depew, on his ninety-third birthday, April 23, 1927, had given expression to the religious<br />

faith which had guided him through his life. They were:<br />

"From my experience of ninety-three years I am more firmly anchored<br />

to the Bible than ever before, and believe implicitly in its<br />

teachings and in the God it portrays. I have always felt a real dependency<br />

on God. My idea of God is personal rather than a force;<br />

not a personality such as we are, of course, but a glorified, divine<br />

and infinite heart, brain and spirit, all-comprehending,, all-powerful,<br />

never failing.<br />

"I think of God as being, interested in mortals and mortal affairs;<br />

Christ as his earthly manifestation; Christ, who understood, lived,<br />

toiled and suffered upon earth as men and women do; Christ, who<br />

died, as we must do before we live a&ain. Christ is God's pledge<br />

of love."<br />

"I don't believe much in chance; you have to make things come<br />

your way and they will come your way if you will follow the rules<br />

of moderation, of not worrying, of diversifying your interests, of<br />

trusting God and loving your fellow beings. A thing, I have never<br />

lost is faith in the efficacy of prayer. I have tested it repeatedly.<br />

It has never failed."<br />

"For a life, abounding in &ood things, in a capacity for enjoying<br />

everything,, in reciprocal attachments and contributions with multitudes<br />

of men and women, in more than my share of health and happiness,<br />

I reverently thank God that I am alive and that I have lived."<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

n t r a l 1 W G S Q 0 Q Z M Q<br />

Volume IX M A Y • 1928 er 2<br />

C h a m m c e y M . D e p e w , C h a i r m a n o f t h e B o a r d s<br />

>ie§ a t<br />

Bishop Manning. Bishop Stires es and other of the clergy who officiated at the funeral of Chauncey M. Depew leaving the<br />

church with the honorary pall bearers. At the head of the stairs, on the right, is Mayor James J. Walker President<br />

Crowley Is part way down the le stairs; beside him is Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler, President of Columbia Uni\ iverslty. Just<br />

ahead ah*»art nf of him la is William K. K Vanrionhil* Vanderbllt.<br />

Jhauncey Mitchell Depew, for<br />

the last thirty years Chairman<br />

of the Board of Directors of<br />

the New York Central Lines, and for<br />

thirteen years prior to his elevation to<br />

that office, President of the New York<br />

Central Railroad, died of bronchopneumonia<br />

in his residence, No. 27<br />

West Fifty-fourth Street, New York<br />

City, at twenty minutes after four<br />

o'clock, the morning of Thursday,<br />

April 5.<br />

Thus passed out of service not only<br />

the oldest officer of the New York Central<br />

family but the only survivor of a<br />

notable group of transportation pio-<br />

neers under whose guidance and creative<br />

policies the American railroads of<br />

today have been moulded into their<br />

present vast network.<br />

Mr. Depew, as had been his custom<br />

for many years, had passed the winter<br />

in Florida, at his beloved St. Augustine.<br />

He returned to New York on<br />

March 26 to attend a meeting of the<br />

Board of Directors, for time had<br />

failed to dull his intense personal interest<br />

in all the affairs of the Company<br />

with which he had been connected<br />

for sixty-two years. He was<br />

at his office on March 27 and 28, during<br />

which days a slight cold developed.<br />

On March 29, Dr. H. Lyman Hooker<br />

was called to attend him, and every<br />

recourse known to modern medical<br />

science was drawn on to offset the<br />

danger inherent in his advanced age.<br />

Through it all in the few days that<br />

followed, Mr. Depew was cheerful and<br />

confident of his recovery, but his internationally<br />

known optimism for<br />

once failed and Doctors Edward L.<br />

Keyes, Lewis A. Conner and Samuel<br />

W. Lambert were called in as consultants.<br />

From March 29 to the evening of<br />

April 4 the distinguished patient's<br />

condition was not considered grave,<br />

but at seven o'clock on the night of


8<br />

the latter date changes for the worse<br />

developed.<br />

At three o'clock on the morning of<br />

April 5 Mr. Depew was noted to be<br />

unconscious and breathing heavily.<br />

Dr. Hooker, who was in an adjoining<br />

room, was summoned. He directed<br />

that the family be called into the<br />

room. Mrs. Depew, Chauncey M. Depew,<br />

Jr., an only son, and Miss Anne<br />

Depew Paulding, a niece, immediately<br />

came. Soon it became evident to all<br />

present that the end was at hand, and<br />

the household staff, most of whom had<br />

been with the family for years, were<br />

summoned. All were present when<br />

Mr. Depew peacefully breathed his<br />

last. His nephew, Charles Cook<br />

Paulding, Vice-President, Public Relations,<br />

New York Central Lines,<br />

reached the house a little later.<br />

Thus, within eighteen days of his<br />

ninety-fourth birthday, Mr. Depew,<br />

surrounded by his loved ones, departed<br />

from the world of which he had been<br />

one of its most famous characters<br />

and which he had enriched so much<br />

with his wholesome philosophy, gentle<br />

toleration, and constant spread of<br />

good cheer.<br />

Extra editions of the morning papers<br />

carried the announcement of his<br />

death. A few hours later messages<br />

of condolence and magnificent floral<br />

tributes began arriving at the Depew<br />

home. They were a striking testimony<br />

to the esteem in which this great<br />

man was held in the hearts of his fellow<br />

men and women, and they continued<br />

in a steady stream until the<br />

hour of his funeral. In addition there<br />

came to his home many men and women<br />

who had known Mr. Depew in<br />

politics, in business and transportation<br />

circles, or socially, to leave their<br />

personal condolences with his widow<br />

and family.<br />

One of the first tributes paid to the<br />

deceased Chairman of the Board was<br />

that of President Crowley, who ordered<br />

all flags displayed at half mast<br />

on all buildings of the New York Central<br />

Lines until after the funeral, and<br />

the draping in mourning of the Concourse<br />

of Grand Central Terminal and<br />

the facade of the General Office Building<br />

at No. 466 Lexington Avenue.<br />

Messages of condolence came to<br />

Mrs. Depew by the hundreds. They<br />

came from President Coolidge, Vice-<br />

President Dawes, the Prince of Wales<br />

and many others of the world's great,<br />

representing many nationalities. Following<br />

are a few of the messages:<br />

President Coolidge—"I have learned<br />

with great sorrow of the death of Senator<br />

Depew. His high sense of personal<br />

service and his rare and fine<br />

philosophy of life made him respected<br />

and beloved. I have always valued<br />

deeply his unswerving support of my<br />

administration and shall always remember<br />

with pleasure his visits with<br />

you to the White House. Mrs. Coolidge<br />

joins me in heartfelt sympathy."<br />

Vice-President Dawes—"My wife<br />

and I join in deep sympathy to you in<br />

your bereavement. A great man and<br />

leader in our national life, Senator<br />

Depew is mourned by his countrymen."<br />

Sir Esme Howard, Ambassador<br />

from Great Britain—"I have received<br />

a cable from the Prince of Wales saying<br />

that his Royal Highness is deeply<br />

President Crowley's<br />

Tribute<br />

//"TN the death of Chauncey M.<br />

-•- Depew, America has lost one<br />

of its foremost citizens and the<br />

railroad world one of its great historic<br />

figures. Mr. Depew's lifetime<br />

covered, lacking a few years, the<br />

history of the American railroad.<br />

The New York Central's first unfa,<br />

the Mohawk & Hudson Rail Road,<br />

operated its first train less than<br />

three years prior to the birth of<br />

Mr. Depew. In his sixty-two years<br />

of service with the New York Central—thirteen<br />

years as President<br />

and thirty years as Chairman of<br />

the Board—Mr. Depew played a<br />

leading role in the remarkable development<br />

of modern transportation.<br />

His nobility of character, his<br />

lovable personal characteristics and<br />

his loyalty to his friends endeared<br />

him to all."<br />

distressed to hear of the death of Mr.<br />

Depew and desiring that his sincere<br />

sympathy be conveyed to you and his<br />

family."<br />

Governor Alfred E. Smith, of New<br />

York State—"I learned with great regret<br />

of the death of Chauncey M. Depew.<br />

He was one of the leading citizens<br />

of our country and of our State.<br />

As far back as 1864 he was elected to<br />

the office of Secretary of State. During<br />

a long and useful life, he always<br />

displayed a great interest in our public<br />

affairs. He served the people of<br />

F<br />

UNERAL services, of beautiful<br />

simplicity, were held for Chauncey<br />

M. Depew, America's most beloved<br />

patriarch and senior railroad executive,<br />

in St. Thomas' Protestant Episcopal<br />

Church, Fifth Avenue and Fiftythird<br />

Street, New York City, on Saturday,<br />

April 7, commencing at 10:30<br />

o'clock in the morning.<br />

The church is within a block of his<br />

late home and is the one where he had<br />

worshipped for many years. This was<br />

also the same church from which, with<br />

similar simple services, the funeral of<br />

the late President of the New York<br />

Central Lines, Alfred H. Smith, was<br />

held four years ago.<br />

The great auditorium was filled<br />

with an assemblage of distinguished<br />

men and women representative of the<br />

nation, state and city, as well as those<br />

from every walk of life, including political,<br />

financial and railroad circles,<br />

and every strata of society. Their<br />

presence was a fitting tribute to the<br />

unusually wide circle of friends and<br />

admirers which the statesman and<br />

railroad executive had enjoyed<br />

throughout his long and eventful life.<br />

Delegations from the Maintenance<br />

of Way, Operating, Motive Power, Engineering,<br />

Traffic, Accounting and<br />

other departments of the New York<br />

Central attended the funeral.<br />

Outside the church thousands stood<br />

bareheaded on Fifth Avenue through-<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

t * *<br />

this State with distinction in the Senate<br />

of the United States. He had an<br />

army of friends and admirers, and<br />

while he lived to a ripe old age he will<br />

nevertheless be greatly missed. I have<br />

ordered the flags on the public buildings<br />

at half mast. I express the deep<br />

sorrow of the people of the State and<br />

extend our sincere sympathy to the<br />

members of his family."<br />

John D. Rockefeller—"I have just<br />

learned with deep sorrow of the passing<br />

of your dear husband and my lifelong<br />

friend, Mr. Depew. He will be<br />

greatly missed by the multitudes who<br />

knew him but to love and honor him<br />

for his noble character and high attainments<br />

and for the valuable services<br />

which he has* rendered to his<br />

country and the world. Be assured of<br />

my sympathy for you and other members<br />

of your family in sad bereavement."<br />

Charles E. Hughes, former Governor<br />

of the State of New York, Secretary<br />

of State of the United States, and<br />

Justice of the Supreme Court of the<br />

United States—"Permit me to express<br />

my deep sympathy. The closing of a<br />

life of such extraordinary usefulness<br />

and distinction seems to mark the end<br />

of a period of which Mr. Depew was<br />

one of the most illustrious figures.<br />

The best part of it was that in what<br />

we ordinarily call old age, he capitalized<br />

the varied experiences of the examplar<br />

of wisdom, grace and buoyancy<br />

of spirit, so that in a very real<br />

sense he retained leadership to the<br />

end. Mr. Depew illustrated the victory<br />

of life by his rational self-discipline,<br />

his unfailing interest, and his<br />

undimmed hope. He radiated good<br />

cheer and his passing leaves us with a<br />

sense of irremediable loss."<br />

Hundreds of Notables at the Funeral Services<br />

out the entire service, striking evidence<br />

of the great hold Mr. Depew's<br />

magnetic personality had on the public,<br />

the later generations of which<br />

knew only of him through his written<br />

and spoken words, and of his oftrecounted<br />

achievements from the lips<br />

and writings of others.<br />

The beautiful Episcopal Church<br />

burial service, barren of eulogy or<br />

pomp, was conducted by the Right<br />

Reverend Ernest M. Stires, Bishop of<br />

the Diocese of Long Island, who was<br />

rector of St. Thomas' Church for<br />

many years and a warm friend of<br />

Senator Depew; the Right Reverend<br />

William T. Manning, Bishop of Diocese<br />

of New York, who requested the<br />

honor of participating, and the Reverend<br />

Roelif F. Brooks, Rector of St.<br />

Thomas' Church.<br />

The coffin, covered with a deep blanket<br />

of red roses on which lay a cross<br />

of lilies of the valley, was taken from<br />

the home nearby and conveyed to the<br />

church soon after 10 o'clock. Traffic<br />

was not suspended on Fifth Avenue,<br />

at the request of Mrs. Depew, but<br />

steel erection work on a near-by building<br />

was stopped. Otherwise the noted<br />

statesman's body was received into the<br />

church for the burial service with the<br />

same simplicity accorded the commoner<br />

of no distinction.<br />

As the members of the family were<br />

being seated, the organ played Bach's<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

third Vt«.t m! v"'! 9<br />

t h e<br />

° ., „ f u n e r a l<br />

«rv,ces for Chauncey M. Depew in St. Thomas' Church, Fifth Avenue and Fifty<br />

thLlr hi J ' -Z S f f i C e r S<br />

.° ° f t h e N e W Y<br />

° r k C e n t r a l w e r e s t i<br />

" assembling in the forward pews to pay tribute to<br />

tneir esteemed leader. The choir stalls were banked with flowers, the gifts of many whose names are known the world over.<br />

9


10 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

Chauncey M. Depew, Chairman of the Board of Directors of the New York Central,<br />

with his nephew, Charles C. Paulding, Vice-President, Public Relations, New York<br />

Central Lines, photographed in the Senator's office on his ninety-third birthday.<br />

"Largo," the melody of which was<br />

carried on a violin played by Nahan<br />

Franko, formerly of the Metropolitan<br />

Opera House, and an old friend of<br />

Senator Depew.<br />

The "Largo" was followed by an<br />

organ selection by Dr. T. Tertius<br />

Noble, organist of the church. There<br />

was a moment's hush and from behind<br />

the closed door of the chancel came<br />

the sound of voices in song. The door<br />

opened and the music became louder<br />

as the vested boys' choir of the church<br />

entered, singing the famous hymn,<br />

"The Strife Is O'er."<br />

Meanwhile down the center aisle<br />

moved the funeral procession, headed<br />

by the clergy and followed by the distinguished<br />

honorary pall bearers. The<br />

flower-covered casket was placed at<br />

the chancel rail.<br />

The Right Reverend Ernest M.<br />

Stires, then read the Scripture lesson,<br />

the fifteenth chapter of the First<br />

Epistle of St. Paul to the Corinthians.<br />

The creed was recited by those in the<br />

church, which was followed by the<br />

choir, singing "Nearer, My God, To<br />

Thee," and afterward chanting. "The<br />

Lord Is My Shepherd."<br />

Bishop Stires then led the congregation<br />

in prayer. This was followed<br />

from the altar by the voice of Dr.<br />

Brooks, saying:<br />

"Man that is born of woman hath<br />

but a short time to live."<br />

He then took a cluster of ealla lilies<br />

from one of the two gold vases on the<br />

altar and, accompanied by Bishop<br />

Manning, walked to the head of the<br />

casket. As Dr. Brooks laid the flowers<br />

on it, Randall Jacquillard, boy soprano<br />

of the choir, sang "I Heard a<br />

Voice from Heaven," which was composed<br />

by Dr. Noble, organist of the<br />

church, and sung for the first time at<br />

the Good Friday Service the day before.<br />

Bishop Manning then recited the<br />

Lord's Prayer and committed the body<br />

"unto God's gracious mercy and protection."<br />

Then came the chanting of<br />

the "Lesser Litany," followed by<br />

"Hark, Hark, My Soul," the recessional<br />

hymn.<br />

As the body left the church through<br />

a lane lined on either side by the<br />

honorary pall bearers, New York Central<br />

uniformed police and an unexpected<br />

guard of honor composed of<br />

twelve cadets in uniform from the<br />

Peekskill Military Academy, a hush<br />

fell over Fifth Avenue that was a<br />

noble tribute to the high esteem in<br />

which this great man was held. It<br />

proved not necessary to stop traffic,<br />

for it ceased automatically as a<br />

gesture of respect to the great man<br />

whose funeral was approaching its<br />

end.<br />

The Pall Bearers<br />

The honorary pall bearers were:<br />

Frederick W. Vanderbilt, William K.<br />

Vanderbilt, Patrick E. Crowley,<br />

Nicholas Murray Butler, Edward L.<br />

Rossiter, Dr. Henry S. Pritchett,<br />

Frank K. Sturgis, George F. Baker,<br />

Frank Egerton Webb, Newcomb<br />

Carlton, Fred W. Sargent, Morgan J.<br />

O'Brien, Austen G. Fox, Jackson E.<br />

Reynolds, John D. Rockefeller, Jr.,<br />

William Cooper Procter, Bertram<br />

Cutler, Charles H. Sabin, Charles B.<br />

Seger, Henry B. Anderson, Frederick<br />

W. Otte, Elihu Root, James A.<br />

O'Gorman, Ogden Mills, Myron C.<br />

Taylor, John S. Fisher, James J.<br />

Walker, Robert F. Wagner, Royal S.<br />

Copeland, Dr. James Rowland Angell,<br />

Albert H. Harris, Edward S.<br />

Harkness and Warren S. Hayden.<br />

The chancel was buried in flowers.<br />

Conspicuous among them was a huge<br />

wreath, nearly five feet in diameter,<br />

made of red roses with a cluster of<br />

gardenias and lavender statice and<br />

sent by the Board of Directors of the<br />

New York Central Railroad Company.<br />

Many Tributes of Flowers<br />

Among the bewildering array of<br />

other pieces were: Roses and violets,<br />

The Montauk Club, Brooklyn, of<br />

which Mr. Depew had been the guest<br />

of honor yearly for thirty years;<br />

spray of lilies from the City of St.<br />

Augustine, Florida; huge wreath of<br />

roses from the officers of the New<br />

York Central Railroad, Line West,<br />

Cleveland, Ohio; spray of roses from<br />

the Trustees of Peekskill Military<br />

Academy, of which Mr. Depew was a<br />

graduate; roses and violets from the<br />

Council and members of the Yale<br />

Club of New York; wreath, officers of<br />

Yale University; spray of white roses,<br />

Kane Lodge No. 454, F. & A. M., of<br />

which Mr. Depew was a member;<br />

white roses from P. E. Crowley, President,<br />

New York Central Lines; stand<br />

of yellow lilies and roses, Harold S.<br />

Vanderbilt; spray of white roses and<br />

palms, William Kissam Vanderbilt;<br />

spray, Mrs. Vanderbilt; spray of lilies,<br />

Mr. and Mrs. George H. Ingalls;<br />

wreath of red roses, C. J. Brister and<br />

T. W. Evans; roses and sweet peas,<br />

Mr. and Mrs. William D. Guthrie;<br />

roses, Mr. and Mrs. Frederick R.<br />

Coudert; lilies, the Vicomtesse de<br />

Brisson and Comte Chauncey Depew<br />

de Brisson; roses, Mrs. Ira A. Place;<br />

roses, R. D. Starbuck; roses, Mr. and<br />

Mrs. Edward L. Rossiter; yellow<br />

roses, Directors and Officers, American<br />

Exchange - Irving Trust Company;<br />

lilies, Brotherhood of <strong>Railway</strong> Clerks,<br />

New York Central, Line East; roses,<br />

Helen Hartley Jenkins, Marcellus<br />

Hartley Dodge; circlet of roses and<br />

lilies, John McEntee Bowman: roses,<br />

Albert H. Harris, Chairman of the<br />

Finance Committee, Board of Directors<br />

of the New York Central; roses,<br />

St. Augustine, Fla., Historical Society<br />

and Institute of Science; roses, Barron<br />

Collier; roses, William N. Greve<br />

and Directors of the Prudence Company;<br />

white roses, Duncan C. Pell;<br />

yellow roses, William A. Greer; poppies,<br />

A. G. Leonard; roses, Mrs.<br />

Henry White; circlet of roses and<br />

violets, Mr. and Mrs. Robert W.<br />

Brookings; lilies, Mr. and Mrs. Jorge<br />

Andre; wreath of roses, W. S.<br />

Wishart, L. V. Porter and F. H.<br />

Meeder, Comptroller and Assistant<br />

Comptrollers, New York Central Railroad.<br />

Large wreath of yellow roses, orchids<br />

and yellow calla lilies, Ogden<br />

Mills; wreath of Easter lilies and violets,<br />

John D. Rockefeller, Sr.; wreath<br />

of spring flowers, Mrs. Vanderbilt;<br />

spray of roses and violets, Mr. and


Bearing the rose-blanketed coffin of the Senator between the lines of honorary pall bearers, cadets and New York Central police, down the steps of St. Thomas' Church Into the<br />

waiting funeral coach, which carried It to the family mausoleum at Peekskill.


12<br />

Mrs. Ryan; spray of Easter lilies,<br />

General and Mrs. Kuhn; wreath of<br />

sweet peas and roses, Railroad Young<br />

Mens' Christian Association; spray<br />

of lilies, Friday Night Club of the<br />

Yale Club; large wreath of Easter<br />

lilies and red roses on a stand, Officials<br />

of the Law, Land and Tax Claim<br />

and Freight Claim Departments of the<br />

New York Central Railroad; spray of<br />

pink roses, Sara T. Wetmore; wreath<br />

of red and tea roses, Mr. and Mrs.<br />

William J. Schieffelin, Mrs. Dave H.<br />

Morris, Mrs. Shepard Fabbri; wreath<br />

of pink roses, violets and lilies, John<br />

D. Rockefeller, Jr.; spray of white<br />

and pink carnations, John N. Beckley;<br />

spray of Easter lilies and red roses,<br />

New York Central Public Relations<br />

Department; wreath of roses, Easter<br />

lilies and violets, Albert Morris Bagby;<br />

wreath of red roses and violets,<br />

Mrs. Twombly; wreath of violets and<br />

tea roses, Pilgrims of Great Britain;<br />

large spray of red roses, Pilgrims of<br />

the United* States; spray of red roses,<br />

Faculty and students of Peekskill<br />

Military Academy; spray of palm<br />

leaves and lilies, Mr. and Mrs. William<br />

Fahnestock; wreath of orchids and<br />

sweet peas, Mrs. Whitelaw Reid;<br />

spray of calla lilies and roses, Dr. and<br />

Mrs. L. W. Alston; wreath of white<br />

roses, The Players; spray of tea roses,<br />

Executive Committee of the Kensico<br />

Cemetery; wreath of white carnations<br />

and Easter lilies from the New York<br />

Central Veterans' Association, Metropolitan<br />

Chapter.<br />

Other offerings were a spray from<br />

Psi Upsilon fraternity; roses from the<br />

officers of the Bankers Trust Company;<br />

roses, Mr. and Mrs. William<br />

Hamilton English; lilies, New York<br />

Central Choral Society; spray red<br />

roses, Mrs. Alfred Hudson Townley;<br />

spray of red roses, Russell Alexander<br />

Alger; wreath of red roses, Mr. and<br />

Mrs. Edmund Lincoln Baylies; lilies,<br />

Mrs. Graham Vanderbilt; roses and<br />

palms, Mrs. Earl Smith; and flowers<br />

from Mr. and Mrs. G. Charles Linthicum,<br />

Henry S. Redmond, Marquis and<br />

Marquise de Pontoi-Pontcaire, Henry<br />

B. Anderson, Mr. and Mrs. William D.<br />

Guthrie and Clarence R. Dugan.<br />

The church was filled with nearly<br />

2,500 persons, most of them notable in<br />

American society, finance, business<br />

and transportation circles. A few of<br />

those present were:<br />

F. D. Underwood, President, Erie<br />

Railroad; Former United States Senator<br />

William M. Calder; Charles S.<br />

Whitman, former Governor of New<br />

York; Charles Evans Hughes; H. B.<br />

Anderson, attorney; Mayor James J.<br />

Walker; Col. Charles E. Waller, Vice-<br />

President, Lincoln Bank; Col. James<br />

K. Apgar, former Village President of<br />

Peekskill; Col. L. B. Gleason, Secretary,<br />

New York State Republican<br />

Committee and Secretary, National<br />

Republican Club; Dr. Charles A. Robinson,<br />

Principal, Peekskill Military<br />

Academy; H. S. Vreeland, former<br />

President, Metropolitan Street <strong>Railway</strong>s;<br />

delegation of sixteen cadets<br />

from Peekskill Military Academy under<br />

command of Cadet Captain La<br />

Spina; Cornelius A. Pugsley, President,<br />

Westchester County National<br />

Bank and former representative;<br />

Louis Wiley, Business Manager, New<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Chauncey M. Depew as he appeared on his ninety-first birthday, in his office at<br />

466 Lexington Avenue, New York, where he worked dally until a short time before<br />

his death.<br />

York Times; Stephen Baker, President,<br />

Manhattan Trust Company;<br />

Mrs. (General) M. D. Hardin, St. Augustine,<br />

Fla.; Mr. and Mrs. H. S.<br />

Stone, Syracuse; Harold Colee, representing<br />

city of St. Augustine, Fla.,<br />

Florida East Coast <strong>Railway</strong>, St. Augustine<br />

Historical Society and Institute<br />

of Science and other Florida organizations;<br />

Col. A. Morgan, Commander<br />

Lloyd Aspinwall Post, No.<br />

600, Grand Army of the Republic;<br />

W. W. Adair, Secretary, Railroad<br />

Y.M.C.A.; R. D. Starbuck, Vice-President,<br />

New York Central Railroad; M.<br />

J. Alger, Executive Assistant to<br />

President, New York Central Lines;<br />

R. J. Cary, Vice-President and General<br />

Counsel, New York Central<br />

Lines; W. J. Fripp, Assistant Vice-<br />

President, New York Central Railroad;<br />

J. K. Lovell, Freight Claim<br />

Agent, New York Central Railroad;<br />

L. A. Robison, Passenger Traffic Manager,<br />

New York Central Railroad;<br />

Harry Parry, General Passenger<br />

Agent, New York Central Railroad;<br />

A. S. Lyman, General Attorney, New<br />

York Central Railroad; T. W. Evans,<br />

Vice-President, Indiana Harbor Belt<br />

Railroad and Chicago River & Indiana<br />

Railroad Company; G. M. Glazier,<br />

General Auditor, New York Central<br />

Railroad; C. F. Smith, General<br />

Superintendent Passenger Transportation,<br />

New York Central Railroad;<br />

W. B. Pollock, Traffic Department,<br />

New York Central Railroad; J. V.<br />

Neubert, Chief Engineer, Maintenance<br />

of Way, New York Central Lines; J.<br />

Aronson, Attorney, New York Central<br />

Railroad; F. N. Melius, General Superintendent,<br />

New York Terminal<br />

District, New York Central Railroad;<br />

C. E. Hill, General Safety Agent,<br />

New York Central Lines; C. W. Hammond,<br />

Assistant General Safety<br />

Agent; J. L. Ferris, Auditor of Passenger<br />

Accounts, New York Central<br />

Railroad; L. H. King, former Register<br />

of Contracts, New York Central Railroad;<br />

New York Central Railroad Engineering<br />

Department, delegation of<br />

twenty employes, and delegations from<br />

other departments.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 13<br />

Chauncey M . Depew's Notable Career<br />

HEN Chauncey M. Depew died,<br />

one of the notable figures in<br />

American history passed from the<br />

stage. In the rare quality of his many<br />

gifts, in the soundness of his judgment,<br />

the diversity of his interests,<br />

in the extraordinary extent of his<br />

friendships among the elect of the<br />

world, in the importance of his<br />

achievements, he ranked among the<br />

foremost men who have contributed<br />

to America's greatness.<br />

But a sad world which takes itself<br />

too seriously for its own good will<br />

remember Chauncey Depew longest<br />

and most fondly as a raconteur who<br />

had no peer throughout his long life.<br />

Newspapers were always glad to publish<br />

Depew's latest, men never tired<br />

of passing his stories along by word<br />

of mouth.<br />

It would be a mistake to under-rate<br />

Depew's rare gift for story telling.<br />

Indeed, it would be hard to over-estimate<br />

its importance. He was an orator<br />

of unusual charm and his stories<br />

were interpolated to drive home a<br />

point or to whip up interest in the<br />

truths he was driving home. In his<br />

after-dinner speeches, in which he was<br />

at his best, Depew sought recreation<br />

and relaxation for himself, as other<br />

men play golf or hunt or fish or ride;<br />

and they served his purpose. He estimated<br />

that he had attended 8,000<br />

banquets and he was a speaker at<br />

many of them. His published speeches<br />

filled nineteen volumes. They constitute<br />

but a fraction of the total.<br />

He had no thought, perhaps, of<br />

turning his genius as an orator to<br />

practical account in promoting traffic,<br />

yet it was undoubtedly a factor the<br />

value of which would be difficult to<br />

compute in shaping the destinies of<br />

the great railroad system with which<br />

he was associated for so many years.<br />

Perhaps it would not be amiss to call<br />

Depew one of the greatest salesmen<br />

America ever produced. In a gathering<br />

of men of affairs his congenial<br />

good fellowship, his wit and humor,<br />

created an impression that could not<br />

fail to continue into the next business<br />

day and, by a natural association of<br />

ideas, bring the mind around to the<br />

railroad whose president had made an<br />

evening delightful.<br />

The Family of Depew<br />

Chauncey Mitchell Depew was born<br />

in Peekskill, N. Y., April 23, 1834, the<br />

son of Isaac and Martha (Mitchell)<br />

Depew.<br />

He was the oldest of the family,<br />

which included two brothers and two<br />

sisters. His father, Isaac Depew, a<br />

prominent merchant, was a lineal descendant<br />

in the sixth generation of<br />

Francois Du Puy, a Huguenot who<br />

fled from France in 1651 to escape<br />

from the religious persecutions of that<br />

period, going first to the Netherlands<br />

and ten years later to New Amsterdam,<br />

where he married Geertje Willems<br />

in 1661. The name Du Puy is<br />

an ancient one, having been prominent<br />

as early as the eleventh century.<br />

It has undergone many changes in its<br />

transformation from French through<br />

Dutch into English, being recorded as<br />

Dupuis, Dupui, Dupuy, Depee, Depuy,<br />

De Pue, Depu, Depew, etc. The village<br />

of Peekskill, founded in 1764, is<br />

on land which belonged to the fatherin-law<br />

of Francois Du Puy and to his<br />

descendants.<br />

On his mother's side, Mr. Depew's<br />

ancestry included the Mitchells, Shermans,<br />

Palmers, Winships, Wellingtons,<br />

Minots and Johnstons, all notable<br />

families.<br />

When he was about five years old<br />

his mother took him to the school of<br />

Mrs. Westbrook, wife of a pastor of<br />

the Dutch Reformed Church. Mrs.<br />

Westbrook was a highly educated woman<br />

and her husband was a man of<br />

letters as well as a teacher. He specialized<br />

in ancient history and the interest<br />

he aroused in Roman and Greek<br />

culture and achievements continued<br />

with Mr. Depew throughout his life.<br />

Young Chauncey was regarded as a<br />

prodigy and became a leader among<br />

the boys of the village.<br />

To School in His Native Town<br />

Later on Mr. Depew attended<br />

Peekskill Academy, a character-making<br />

institution, the graduates from<br />

which entered professions or business<br />

where they made an unusual record<br />

of success. Depew graduated from<br />

the Academy in 1852. The program<br />

of exercises for that day saw Mr.<br />

Depew launched even then on his long<br />

career as a speaker; for he was down<br />

for several original speeches while the<br />

other boys merely had recitations.<br />

Another educational opportunity of<br />

which Mr. Depew himself spoke more<br />

than once came in his way because one<br />

of his uncles was postmaster at Peekskill.<br />

Through the post office came<br />

several high class magazines and foreign<br />

reviews. There was no rural delivery<br />

in those days and the mail could<br />

only be had on personal application,<br />

and the result was that the subscribers<br />

for these periodicals frequently<br />

left them a long time before they were<br />

called for. Depew was an omnivorous<br />

reader and as a result these publications,<br />

especially the foreign reviews,<br />

became a fascinating source of information<br />

and culture.<br />

Still another unincorporated yet valuable<br />

school which Mr. Depew himself<br />

confessed having attended, was the<br />

frequent sessions at the drug store of<br />

the elder statesmen of the village.<br />

On certain evenings these men would<br />

avail themselves of the hospitable<br />

chairs about the stove and discuss not<br />

only local matters, but general conditions<br />

in the country, some of the<br />

discussions revolving about the provisions<br />

of various measures which had<br />

been proposed and enacted into laws.<br />

They usually related to slavery, the<br />

compromise measures, the introduction<br />

of slaves into new territories, the<br />

fugitive slave law, and they were handled<br />

with much intelligence and information.<br />

The boys of the village<br />

were eager listeners on the outskirts<br />

of this congress. These village store<br />

discussions throughout the country<br />

were the most important factors in<br />

forming that public opinion, especial­<br />

ly among the young, which supported<br />

Mr. Lincoln in his successful efforts<br />

to save the Union at whatever cost.<br />

But perhaps the most important<br />

influence in shaping the character of<br />

young Depew was his mother, a woman<br />

of unusual intellect bordering<br />

upon genius. There were no means<br />

of higher education for girls at that<br />

period, but her father, who was an<br />

eminent lawyer, and her grandfather,<br />

a judge, finding her so receptive, educated<br />

her with the care that was given<br />

to boys who were intended for a professional<br />

life. She was well versed in<br />

the literature of the times of Queen<br />

Elizabeth and Queen Anne and, with<br />

a retentive memory, knew by heart<br />

many of the English classics. She<br />

wrote well, but never for publication.<br />

Attached to these accomplishments<br />

were rare good sense and prophetic<br />

vision. Mr. Depew once said, "The<br />

foundation and much of the superstructure<br />

of all that I have, and all<br />

that I am, were her work."<br />

Isaac Depew had placed Chauncey<br />

in the Academy in the hope that he<br />

would join him in business, but the<br />

youth, influenced probably by his<br />

mother and Dr. Westbrook, had visions<br />

of a more ambitious career. The result<br />

was that he was sent to Yale<br />

University in 1852, graduating in<br />

1856, in a class of 125 that became<br />

famous, partly on account of the general<br />

high standing in the professions<br />

its members later attained, two of<br />

whom reached the bench of the United<br />

States Supreme Court. In this class<br />

Depew made his mark, particularly<br />

by his gifts as a speaker.<br />

Legal Practice Begun<br />

After graduating from Yale, Mr.<br />

Depew entered the office of Edward<br />

Wells, a lawyer of Peekskill, as a<br />

student. He was admitted to the<br />

Bar in 1858 and immediately opened<br />

an office in the village. Here is Mr.<br />

Depew's own account of his first client:<br />

"My first client was a prosperous<br />

farmer who wanted an opinion on a<br />

rather complicated question. I prepared<br />

the case with great care. He<br />

asked me what my fee was and I told<br />

him five dollars. He said 'a dollar and<br />

seventy-five cents is enough for a<br />

young lawyer like you.' Subsequently<br />

he submitted the case to one of the<br />

most eminent lawyers in New York,<br />

who came to the same conclusion and<br />

charged him $500. On account of this<br />

gentleman's national reputation, the<br />

farmer thought that fee was very<br />

reasonable. In subsequent years I<br />

have received several very large retainers,<br />

but none of them gave so<br />

much satisfaction as that dollar and<br />

seventy-five cents which I had actually<br />

earned after having been so long dependent<br />

on my father."<br />

Mr. Depew's political career began<br />

very early. He entered Yale as a<br />

Democrat, his father's party, but the<br />

debates on the campus soon convinced<br />

him that he was on the wrong side<br />

of the great questions of the day. In<br />

1853 he cast his lot with the "Anti-<br />

Nebraska men," who, early in 1856,


14<br />

adopted the name of the "Republican<br />

Party." Thus he may be said to have<br />

been a charter member of the party<br />

•with which he was affiliated for the<br />

remainder of his life. As soon as he<br />

had received his degree he threw himself<br />

enthusiastically into the Presidential<br />

campaign of 1856, supporting<br />

Fremont and Dayton, making speeches<br />

in their behalf and beginning a political<br />

career which made him so prominent<br />

a figure in every succeeding<br />

presidential campaign.<br />

As Politician in New York<br />

Mr. Depew was a member of the<br />

New York Assembly in 1861-2. He<br />

was not a candidate, but was nominated<br />

during his absence from the<br />

State. Of course, he could expect<br />

nothing from his father, and his own<br />

earnings were not large, so he had to<br />

rely upon a personal canvass of a district<br />

which had been largely covered<br />

by rich candidates running against<br />

each other and spending large<br />

amounts of money. But Mr. Depew<br />

made a hot canvass, speaking every<br />

day, and with an investment of less<br />

than $100 for traveling and other expenses,<br />

he was triumphantly elected.<br />

Few men have done so much for<br />

others in politics and sought or received<br />

less for himself than Chauncey<br />

M. Depew. This service in the legislature<br />

was followed by a term as<br />

Secretary of State of New York.<br />

The first National Convention Mr.<br />

Depew ever attended was held in Baltimore<br />

in 1864, when Lincoln was renominated.<br />

Thereafter he was a regular<br />

attendant at National Conventions.<br />

He was delegate-at-large, representing<br />

the whole State, to the Republican<br />

National Convention in 1888,<br />

1892, 1896, 1900, 1904, and was a delegate<br />

in 1908, 1912 and 1916. At the<br />

convention in 1888 he placed Benjamin<br />

Harrison in nomination for the<br />

presidency and he nominated Governor<br />

Morton in 1896.<br />

At the Republican Convention of<br />

1888 Mr. Depew received 99 votes for<br />

the presidential nomination.<br />

His Senatorial Career<br />

He declined election as United<br />

States Senator in 1885 and also declined<br />

appointment as Secretary of<br />

State in the Cabinet of Benjamin<br />

Harrison. But later on he thought<br />

better of the attractions of a term in<br />

the Senate and became Senator from<br />

New York for the two terms from<br />

1899 to 1911.<br />

In 1866 Commodore Vanderbilt sent<br />

for him and offered him the position<br />

of Attorney for the New York & Harlem<br />

Railroad. Mr. Depew had just<br />

been nominated and confirmed United<br />

States Minister to Japan. The appointment<br />

was a complete surprise to<br />

him as he had not been an applicant<br />

for any federal position. The salary<br />

as a Minister was $7,500 a year and<br />

an outfit of $9,000. Commodore Vanderbilt's<br />

offer of the attorneyship for<br />

the Harlem Railroad, which was his<br />

first venture in railroading, was far<br />

less than the salary as Minister.<br />

When Depew called Vanderbilt's attention<br />

to this discrepancy, the old<br />

Commodore said:<br />

"Railroads are the career for a<br />

young man; there is nothing in politics.<br />

Don't be a damned fool."<br />

Upon this presentation of the case,<br />

Mr. Depew decided, then and there,<br />

not to be "a damned fool." On the<br />

first day of January, 1928, he rounded<br />

out sixty-two years of continuous<br />

service with the great railroad system<br />

of which the New York & Harlem<br />

was the nucleus.<br />

Mr. Depew was fond of telling<br />

about the entrance of the Hudson<br />

River Railroad into Peekskill. The<br />

event was locally celebrated. When<br />

the locomotive steamed into the station<br />

many of those present had never<br />

seen one. The engineer was continuously<br />

blowing the whistle to emphasize<br />

the great event. This produced<br />

much consternation and confusion<br />

among the horses, as all farmers were<br />

there with their families in carriages<br />

or wagons. One team of young horses<br />

was driven into a frenzy. Their owner<br />

was unable to control them, but he<br />

kept them on the road as they ran<br />

away in a wild dash over the hills.<br />

In telling this story at a dinner in<br />

England once, Mr. Depew said that as<br />

far as he knew and believed, those<br />

horses were so frightened that they<br />

were still running. A very successful<br />

and serious-minded captain of industry<br />

among the guests sternly rebuked<br />

him by saying:<br />

"That is impossible! Horses were<br />

never born that could run for twentyfive<br />

years without stopping."<br />

The Railroad in 1866<br />

When Mr. Depew entered the service<br />

of the railroad, January 1, 1866,<br />

the Vanderbilt system consisted of the<br />

Hudson River and the Harlem Railroads,<br />

the Harlem ending at Chatham,<br />

128 miles, and the Hudson River Railroad<br />

at Albany, 142 miles. The total<br />

railroad mileage of the United States<br />

at that time was 36,000 miles.<br />

Thus his connection with the New<br />

York Central Railroad covers practically<br />

the whole period of railway<br />

construction, expansion, and development<br />

in the United States. It is a<br />

singular evidence of the rapidity of<br />

the country's growth and of the way<br />

in which that growth has steadily<br />

followed the rails that this development<br />

of states, of villages growing<br />

into cities, of scattered communities<br />

becoming great manufacturing centers,<br />

of an internal commerce exceeding<br />

in volume the foreign interchanges<br />

of the whole world, has come<br />

about during a period covered by the<br />

official career of a single railroad<br />

man: an attorney in 1866, a vicepresident<br />

in 1882, president in 1885,<br />

chairman of the board of directors<br />

from 1898 until the time of his death.<br />

This is a record without a parallel.<br />

One of the lessons taught by the<br />

Civil War which closed in 1865 was<br />

that the country needed more railroads.<br />

The country had learned that<br />

without transportation its vast and<br />

fertile territories could not be made<br />

productive. Conditions due to expansion<br />

of currency and banking practices<br />

encouraged vast schemes of railroad<br />

construction. This and wild expenditures<br />

resulted in the panic of<br />

1873. Really, the whole country went<br />

bankrupt, but recovery was rapid.<br />

Constructive talent of the country<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

realized that restoration of credit and<br />

prosperity must be led by railroad<br />

solvency. The eastern railway situation<br />

was then dominated by Commodore<br />

Vanderbilt, Col. Thomas E. Scott<br />

of the Pennsylvania, and John W.<br />

Garrett of the Baltimore & Ohio.<br />

Both Scott and Garrett were empire<br />

builders. The head of a railway system<br />

in those days had practically unlimited<br />

power in the operation of his<br />

road. The people were so anxious for<br />

the construction of railroads that they<br />

offered every possible inducement to<br />

capital. The result was a great deal<br />

of unprofitable construction and enormous<br />

losses to the promoters.<br />

As New York Central President<br />

Mr. Depew was made president of<br />

the New York Central in 1885, an office<br />

which he held continuously until<br />

1898. During his presidency the labor<br />

question throughout the country<br />

was very acute, and strikes, one after<br />

another, were common. The method<br />

of getting the demands of labor at<br />

that time was to have a committee of<br />

employes or a leader present them to<br />

the division superintendent or the superintendent<br />

of motive power. These<br />

officers were arbitrary and hostile as<br />

the demands, if acceded to, led to an<br />

increase of expenses which would<br />

make them unpopular with the management.<br />

They had a difficult position.<br />

Employes often came to the<br />

conclusion that the only way for them<br />

to compel attention of the higher officers<br />

and directors was to strike.<br />

Against the advice of his associates<br />

in the railroad management, Mr. Depew<br />

opened his doors to any individual<br />

or committee of the company. At<br />

first he was overwhelmed with petty<br />

grievances; but when the men understood<br />

that their cases would be immediately<br />

heard and acted upon they<br />

decided among themselves not to take<br />

any matters to the president unless<br />

they regarded them as of vital importance.<br />

In this way many former<br />

eruptions which led ultimately to serious<br />

results no longer appeared. Mr.<br />

Depew therefore had no trouble with<br />

labor unions and found their representatives<br />

in heart-to-heart talks very<br />

generally reasonable.<br />

There was but one strike on the<br />

New York Central during his administration<br />

and that one occurred while<br />

he was absent in Europe.<br />

Mr. Depew retired from the presidency<br />

in 1898 to become Chairman of<br />

the Board of Directors, a position he<br />

held until the time of his death. As<br />

President and Chairman of the Board<br />

he was, necessarily, a director on the<br />

New York Central and of its numerous<br />

subsidiaries.<br />

Perhaps no other man in history<br />

ever attended so many public dinners<br />

or made so many after-dinner speeches.<br />

On this subject, therefore, he may<br />

be regarded as an authority, and his<br />

pronouncements thereon are worth<br />

preserving. Of food and drink, which<br />

precede oratory, he once said:<br />

"I have never experimented with<br />

strange foods. My health and longevity<br />

are due, more than anything else,<br />

to the fact that I have been very careful<br />

what got inside of me. I have<br />

seen a flow of champagne suggestive<br />

of Niagara, but I have never been<br />

,\ew York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 15<br />

AT 4-6. IN 1880, WHEN HE WAS VICE-PRESIDENT AT 8£ . FROM A PHOTOGRAPH TAKEN OH.<br />

of the New York. Central. Railroad Company his birthday, April £3,1916.<br />

Seventy years of Mr. Depew's life In pictures, from college graduate days through two distinguished careers of politics and<br />

railroading.


16 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

submerged. One rule I have followed:<br />

I pick out of each bill of fare what I<br />

would have eaten if I had stayed at<br />

home. At a very large dinner I do<br />

not take the oysters. I merely touch<br />

the soup. I skip the fish. I skip all<br />

dishes upon which the chef has exhausted<br />

his art. I eat the roast, if it<br />

is lamb or a fowl, and skip it if it is<br />

beef. If there is terrapin, I take that<br />

because it is very digestible, and I<br />

take the game. I do not smoke and I<br />

never drink anything but champagne,<br />

and very little of that. The next day<br />

everything with me, head and vitality,<br />

is as usual. There never was a man<br />

yet whom drink did not dull or deaden.<br />

Most of the great speakers I<br />

have known never touch anything at<br />

dinner. They have told me that their<br />

mental processes would not work until<br />

at least five hours after a meal.<br />

I never was troubled that way.<br />

"A curious thing about public men<br />

going to a dinner to deliver an address<br />

is the way in which many of<br />

them will lose a national reputation.<br />

I have seen half a dozen of the finest<br />

reputations in the country go to<br />

pieces at a banquet in New York because<br />

the man spoke too long and did<br />

not relieve his speech because he<br />

thought it beneath his dignity to give<br />

a display of humor. I remember two<br />

dinners in New York where the principal<br />

speakers were men of national<br />

reputation, and there were six others<br />

to come after them, also of national<br />

reputation. They emptied the hall;<br />

and when they closed there were very<br />

few present except the officers and the<br />

band. The other speakers had also<br />

fled."<br />

The Depew Birthday Dinners<br />

A most unusual feature of this unparalleled<br />

record of public dinners<br />

was the "Depew Birthday Dinners,"<br />

instituted by the Montauk Club, of<br />

Brooklyn, in 1892, and continued for<br />

ithirty-three consecutive years. To him<br />

this was one of the important events<br />

of the year, always looked forward to<br />

with pleasure.<br />

Mr. Depew's orations and addresses<br />

'constitute virtually a history of more<br />

than half a century—not merely _ a<br />

•record of events, but a political,, industrial,<br />

commercial, educational and<br />

social picture of the period in which<br />

he was a conspicuous figure.<br />

It would seem as if the activities<br />

outlined in the foregoing would more<br />

than suffice to absorb the energies of<br />

any man; but in addition to all these,<br />

Mr. Depew found time to edit a series<br />

of the greatest orations of the world<br />

in twenty-four volumes, a massive<br />

work entitled "One Hundred Years of<br />

American Commerce," a series of articles<br />

illustrating the progress of the<br />

country during the century, nineteen<br />

volumes of his own addresses, and to<br />

write "Memories of Eighty Years,"<br />

which, as the title indicates, is not a<br />

formal autobiography, but a series of<br />

recollections. In the inimitable way<br />

of which he was master, Depew set<br />

forth incidents in his own career and<br />

stories about famous persons of the<br />

world with whom he came in contact,<br />

constituting a melange which is a delight.<br />

In addition to his railway and po­<br />

litical engagements, exacting enough<br />

to occupy the entire time of a less<br />

active man, Mr. Depew had numerous<br />

social and semi-social duties. He was<br />

a director of many financial, fiduciary<br />

and other corporations and trusts and<br />

a member of societies too numerous<br />

to mention. Among them were the<br />

Huguenot Society, the Society of the<br />

Cincinnati, Sons of the American<br />

Revolution, Union League, Metropolitan<br />

and Country Clubs, of New York;<br />

Holland Society, New England Society,<br />

Colonial Wars Society, Kane<br />

Lodge, Masons, and Thirty-third Degree<br />

in the Ancient and Accepted Scottish<br />

Rite; St. Nicholas Society, American<br />

Bar Association, Westchester<br />

County Bar Association, Republican<br />

Club, Lotos Club, Players Club,<br />

Transportation Club, University Club,<br />

Phi Beta Kappa Club, Psi Upsilon<br />

Club, Lafayette Post, New York<br />

Chamber of Commerce, New York<br />

Yacht Club, Automobile Club of<br />

America, Tuxedo Club. In Wash­<br />

ington he was a member of the Metropolitan,<br />

Chevy Chase, Country, Alibi<br />

and University Clubs. He was an<br />

officer of the Legion of Honor and<br />

President of the Pilgrims Society.<br />

For many years in succession Mr.<br />

Depew was President of the Yale<br />

Alumni Association and was for<br />

twelve years a member of the Yale<br />

Corporation. For seven successive<br />

years he was President of the Union<br />

League Club.<br />

Mr. Depew was elected by the legislature<br />

in 1874 Regent of the University<br />

of the State of New York and<br />

held that position for thirty-four<br />

years.<br />

Mr. Depew was married in 1871 to<br />

Miss Elise Hegeman, daughter of<br />

William Hegeman, of New York City.<br />

To them one son, Chauncey M. Depew,<br />

Jr., was born in 1882. Mrs. Depew<br />

died in 1892. Mr. Depew was again<br />

married in 1900, his bride being Miss<br />

May Palmer, daughter of John<br />

Palmer, of New York.<br />

F e l l o w Directors o f T h r e e R o a d s<br />

M e m o r i a l to C h a u n c e y D e p e w<br />

The following tribute of esteem for Chauncey M. Depew was passed by<br />

the Boards of the New York Central, Michigan Central, and the Cleveland,<br />

Chicago, Cincinnati & St. Louis Railroads, April 11, and signed by P. E.<br />

Crowley, President, and E. F. Stephenson, Secretary, to be sent to the family<br />

of Mr. Depew:<br />

HE President announced, with<br />

Tdeep regret, the death of Hon.<br />

Chauncey M. Depew, Chairman of<br />

the Board of Directors of the New<br />

York Central Railroad Company and<br />

a Director of this Company, at New<br />

York, on Thursday, the fifth day of<br />

April, 1928, whereupon the following<br />

minute was unanimously adopted:<br />

Mr. Depew was born in Peekskill,<br />

N. Y., April 23, 1834, about three<br />

years after the operation of the first<br />

train over the Mohawk & Hudson<br />

Rail Road—the only one of the railroads<br />

now comprising the New York<br />

Central Lines then in existence—<br />

twelve years prior to the incorporation<br />

of the Hudson River Railroad<br />

Company and three years after the<br />

organization of the New York &<br />

Harlem.<br />

Mr. Depew was educated at Peekskill<br />

Military Academy from which he<br />

graduated in 1852, and at Yale University<br />

where he was a member of the<br />

Class of 1856. He then entered the<br />

office of a lawyer in Peekskill as a<br />

student, was admitted, to the Bar in<br />

1858 and immediately opened an office<br />

in that village.<br />

In 1866, he accepted the office of<br />

Attorney for the New York & Harlem<br />

Railroad Company; was elected a<br />

Director of that company in 1874, and<br />

subsequently became associated and<br />

identified with the New York Central<br />

& Hudson River Railroad Company<br />

and other companies in the so-called<br />

"Vanderbilt System." He served as<br />

Second Vice-President of the New<br />

York Central & Hudson River Railroad<br />

Company for two years, as President<br />

thirteen years and as Chairman<br />

of the Board of that company and the<br />

present company for thirty years,<br />

having been elected to the latter office<br />

in 1898—which position he held until<br />

his death.<br />

He was elected a Director of the<br />

Michigan Central Railroad Company<br />

May 8, 1884, and of the Cleveland,<br />

Cincinnati, Chicago & St. Louis<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> Company June 7, 1889.<br />

He took an active part in public<br />

affairs and became a commanding<br />

figure in finance, politics and society.<br />

Although Mr. Depew was one of our<br />

most distinguished Americans, who<br />

contributed in substantial ways to the<br />

well-being and national life of the<br />

United States, he was so well known<br />

in foreign lands that he might justly<br />

have been claimed to have been a citizen<br />

of the world.<br />

He was a man of scholarly attainments,<br />

deep learning, sound judgment<br />

and remarkable insight into the methods<br />

and plans of his contemporaries<br />

and competitors. Always wisely conservative<br />

in his judgment, he was<br />

nevertheless progressive in studying<br />

the problems of the times; in adapting<br />

himself to them and in giving to<br />

the organizations with which he was<br />

officially connected the full benefit of<br />

his knowledge and judgment.<br />

His personal charm and lovable disposition<br />

endeared him to all who knew<br />

him and his indefatigable activity<br />

made him an outstanding figure in<br />

the railroad world as well as in all<br />

walks of life. He was the beloved<br />

personal friend of every member of<br />

this Board and his loss is keenly felt<br />

as a personal one to each of the members<br />

and as a severe one to the corporation.<br />

In adopting this tribute of the esteem<br />

in which Mr. Depew was held, we<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 17<br />

One Seeks Kest in Peekskill<br />

By Garnett Laidlaw Eskew<br />

1DACK to the valley that he loved so long<br />

The patriarch returns to seek his rest . . .<br />

April is here, the birds break into song,<br />

The same blue hills roll out against the West,<br />

And the same river, sweeping grandly down,<br />

Laps as of old beside his quiet town.<br />

These are unchanged as when, long, long ago,<br />

Beyond the memory of our oldest men,<br />

He was a boy here by the Hudson's flow,<br />

Watching the world go forward, even then,<br />

With happy eyes, and that sure, simple faith<br />

Which was the staff on which he leaned till death.<br />

Four score and fourteen years had laid their weight<br />

Upon him, silvering all his hair with snow,<br />

Bending the once straight shoulders that of late<br />

Had borne no burdens which a man can know<br />

When he is in his prime—such as he bore<br />

Through the long years of life that went before.<br />

But with his soul untrammeled and unbent,<br />

Young to the last, he answers the last call,<br />

Turns from the marts where his best years were spent-<br />

Where traffic roars through vault and echoing hall—<br />

And seeks once more his peaceful boyhood town<br />

Close by the Hudson, curving grandly down.<br />

all feel that his most enduring memorial<br />

is written in the hearts of those he<br />

loved so well and by whom that love<br />

was richly returned.<br />

Resolved: That this tribute be<br />

entered in our minutes and a copy,<br />

engrossed and executed, sent to his<br />

family.<br />

New York-Chicago Non-Excess<br />

Fare Service Further<br />

Improved<br />

"[FUR<strong>TH</strong>ER improvement in non-excess<br />

fare sleeping car service between<br />

Chicago and New York via the<br />

New York Central and New York<br />

Central-Michigan Central Railroads<br />

was announced with the change of<br />

time on April 29.<br />

The Chicago-New York non-excessfare<br />

sleeper via the New York Central<br />

leaving in No. 10, the Easterner, from<br />

LaSalle Street Station, daily at 10:35<br />

A.M., arriving in Buffalo at 1:30 A.M.,<br />

and the Chicago-New York non-excess<br />

fare sleeper via the Michigan Central<br />

in No. 10 of that road, from Central<br />

Station, Chicago, daily at 10:30 A.M.,<br />

now arrive in Buffalo at 1:30 A.M.<br />

Both cars are placed in the fast<br />

Prairie State, New York Central No.<br />

16, at Buffalo, leaving that point at<br />

4:20 A.M., and arriving at Grand<br />

Central Terminal at 3:37 P.M.<br />

It will be noted that these cars lay<br />

over during the night at Buffalo when<br />

passengers are asleep, and that all<br />

trains in which these cars move are<br />

express trains, making few stops.<br />

Body in Mausoleum<br />

at Peekskill, IN. Y.<br />

HE funeral coach, which bore<br />

TChauncey M. Depew on his last<br />

journey to his native village of Peekskill,<br />

N. Y., was followed by five motor<br />

cars, in which were members of the<br />

family only. Mrs. Depew was not<br />

strong enough to undertake the long<br />

journey, so she returned home.<br />

The cortege was escorted by a detachment<br />

of motorcycle police and followed<br />

by two big motor cars carrying<br />

reporters and photographers for the<br />

metropolitan press and the press associations.<br />

At the New York City line<br />

the motorcycle police were relieved by<br />

a similar detachment from the city of<br />

Yonkers, who in turn were relieved<br />

at the north line of Yonkers by a detachment<br />

of State police, which escorted<br />

the cortege to the limits of<br />

Peekskill. Here a detachment of<br />

seven motorcycle policemen of Peekskill<br />

relieved the State police and escorted<br />

the cortege to the cemetery.<br />

As the cortege passed through the<br />

various towns along the route of more<br />

than forty miles, bells were tolled and<br />

the streets were lined with people,<br />

who stood with bared heads as the<br />

cars passed.<br />

At the southern line of Peekskill<br />

an automobile carrying the Board of<br />

Village Trustees, Frederick W. Otte,<br />

President; Carl G. Pfeiffer, Thomas<br />

C. Gardiner, Martin Neilsson, Dr. A.<br />

E. Anderson, Dr. H. F. Hart and<br />

Charles E. Fisher, joined the cortege<br />

for the rest of the journey to Hillside<br />

Cemetery, which lies back in the hills<br />

about four miles from the New York<br />

Central station.<br />

President Otte of the Board of<br />

Trustees had requested all business<br />

houses along the route of the funeral<br />

procession to close for an hour during<br />

the last rites. There was a lavish<br />

display of flags at half mast, while<br />

the street along which the cortege<br />

passed was lined with old friends and<br />

neighbors, who stood silently with<br />

heads bared.<br />

The cortege passed within sight of<br />

the old Depew home and on to the old<br />

cemetery dating back to early Colonial<br />

times, in which old St. Peter's church,<br />

built long before the revolution, where<br />

Washington is said to have worshipped,<br />

and at last to the new cemetery.<br />

On a little knoll on the hillside<br />

stands the beautifully simple, dignified<br />

mausoleum which Mr. Depew had<br />

had built. The lawn in front was<br />

carpeted with cut flowers. On this<br />

carpet the casket was deposited while<br />

the Reverend Dr. Brooks read the<br />

brief service committing the body to<br />

the tomb, while a detachment of boys<br />

in uniform from Peekskill Military<br />

Academy, where Mr. Depew had received<br />

his schooling, stood at attention<br />

and a group of fellow townsmen<br />

bowed reverent heads.<br />

On the following day, Easter Sunday,<br />

memorial services were held in<br />

the Peekskill churches for the village's<br />

most distinguished citizen.


18<br />

"I believe my age is due to the fact<br />

that I have been on good terms with<br />

humankind. I have made strenuous<br />

efforts to be calm, to be tranquil. All<br />

my life I have cultivated people because<br />

I liked them."<br />

"The relations between capital and<br />

labor were never more harmonious<br />

than they are now. This relationship<br />

is changing from brute force to<br />

brains, to the benefit of both sides."<br />

"I believe in military training<br />

camps, for both their value in military<br />

training and for the benefits they<br />

give to citizenship. They have a splendid<br />

effect on the young men themselves,<br />

bringing out their qualities,<br />

making them reliant and inculcating<br />

respect for law and order."<br />

"The dream of the United States<br />

of Europe may become a reality and,<br />

if so, will hasten the steps toward the<br />

federation of the world and, ultimately,<br />

universal peace."<br />

"The man who gives his days and<br />

nights wholly to his business or his<br />

profession, without any change of<br />

work or proper recreation or play,<br />

does not live long and his talent deteriorates.<br />

He can play golf, or if<br />

that is denied him, baseball or football,<br />

or if that is too strenuous he can<br />

walk or row, or instead of plodding<br />

away and spurring a tired brain<br />

which has become exhausted by continuous<br />

strain, he can put his gray<br />

matter upon something else, learn to<br />

have an interest in that pursuit and<br />

turn to it for relief, recreation and<br />

life.<br />

"With one exception, all of my contemporaries<br />

are dead who became<br />

railroad executives when I did. They<br />

died because they were chained to<br />

their desks and to their task. I found<br />

that I had no talent or taste for sports<br />

or physical exercise, but some ability<br />

for public sneaking and easy preparation.<br />

My almost daily appearance before<br />

the public in the evening changed<br />

the switch, freshened my mind, gave<br />

me sleep and fresh brains for the.<br />

morning's task, but it nearly lost me<br />

the confidence of my stockholders."<br />

"One of the great crimes which<br />

shorten life is indifference. As one<br />

loses interest in his church, in his political<br />

party, in his clubs, in his friends<br />

and acquaintances, he dries up and<br />

the grave claims one whom no one<br />

wants or laments. The two most fatal<br />

phrases and the most common are,<br />

'What's the use?' and 'Why should I?'<br />

A hungry and a needy world answers<br />

both with open opportunities for serv­<br />

Tribute from Duke of<br />

Connaught<br />

RS. DEPEW received from the<br />

Duke of Connaught, President of<br />

the Pilgrims of Great Britain, the following<br />

message of condolence on the<br />

death of her husband, who was President<br />

of the Pilgrims of the United<br />

States:<br />

"The Duke of Connaught, President<br />

of the Pilgrims of Great Britain, desires<br />

to be associated with the widespread<br />

tribute for Chauncey M. Depew,<br />

of whose death he has read with<br />

profound sorrow.<br />

"He expresses his sincere condolence<br />

with the Pilgrims of the United States<br />

in the loss of their beloved President<br />

and feels that Depew's great contribution<br />

to Anglo-American institutions<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

tenator D e p e w ' s P h i l o s o p h y as Expressed i n brother Pilgrims fife on both sides ffi^S^SSJ: of the<br />

Extracts from. H i s S<br />

Atlantic."<br />

HE philosophy which guided and ice, helpfulness and good fellowship."<br />

Tmellowed his long life was ex­ "Have a hobby, but never a fad. A. H. Harris Heads New<br />

pressed by Mr. Depew at various times I look over with interest and amuse­<br />

in speeches and interviews with newsment the fads of the past. When I Executive Committee<br />

paper men. Here are some quota­ was a young man the country went<br />

tions :<br />

mad over the speedy end of the world. HE Board of Directors of the New<br />

A sect called the Millerites selected TYork Central Railroad, at their<br />

"I believe absolutely in a just God. the day and the year. The confessions meeting in the General Offices, 466<br />

All that I am and all that I have ac­ of unhappy couples, so that they<br />

Lexington Avecomplished<br />

are due to God, a loving might enter the next world at the asnue,<br />

New York<br />

God. God watches over the individual, signed hour with a clean slate, led to<br />

City, April 11,<br />

I know. Repeatedly my own appeals many of them hoping and praying<br />

voted to abolish<br />

have been answered by Him, perhaps<br />

not just the way I asked for, but always<br />

they have been answered."<br />

that Gabriel would blow his trumpet<br />

the position o f<br />

at once. We all remember the blue<br />

Chairman of the<br />

glass cure. It was a picturesque sight<br />

Board, heretofore<br />

on going to one's office in the morning<br />

held by the late<br />

to see in almost every house a big win­<br />

Chauncey M. Dedow<br />

through which the sun could<br />

pew.<br />

shine, covered with blue glass and a<br />

The Board also<br />

man or woman sitting there, hoping<br />

for an early cure."<br />

voted to change<br />

the name of the<br />

"We remember when it was gen­<br />

Finance Commiterally<br />

taught and almost universally<br />

tee to Executive<br />

believed that the eating of fish in­<br />

Committee. The<br />

creased one's brain power, and the A. H. Harris<br />

duties of the com­<br />

enormous increase in skin troubles mittee remain as heretofore.<br />

from over-indulgence. I recall with<br />

A. H. Harris, Vice-President, Fi­<br />

delight the story of the man who<br />

nance and Corporate Relations, New<br />

wrote his diagnosis to Dr. Oliver Wendell<br />

Holmes, and said, 'Will you please<br />

York Central Lines, who has been<br />

prescribe how much fish I should eat<br />

Chairman of the Finance Committee<br />

a day for the improvement of my<br />

for four years, continues as Chairman<br />

mind?' The doctor answered, 'In your of the Executive Committee.<br />

case, I think it will be sufficient if you<br />

take for breakfast every morning a W. L. Oldroyd Given New Post<br />

whale on toast'."<br />

on B. & A.<br />

"I have absolute faith, from repeated<br />

trials, of the efficacy of prayer. FFECTIVE April 2, W. L. Old­<br />

While the answer has not come by E royd, of Framingham, Mass, was<br />

voice or letter or through mediums, appointed Assist­<br />

yet in some way it has been direct and ant to the Vicepositive.<br />

But the greatest aid is President of the<br />

faith, faith in your church, at the Boston & Albany<br />

same time with a broad charity for all Railroad, with<br />

who prefer other creeds; faith in your headquarters at<br />

government, when its foundations and the South Sta­<br />

principles have been demonstrated, tion, Boston. This<br />

like ours, as the best; faith in your is a new office.<br />

fellow man and woman."<br />

Mr.Oldroyd was<br />

"You may be often deceived, cheat­ born in Springed<br />

and meet with losses and embarfield, Mass., Febrassment,<br />

but these are isolated, and ruary 17, 1886,<br />

very few compared with the great and was educated<br />

mass of friends and acquaintances in the public<br />

who are dependable and valuable.<br />

Have faith in yourself and the guidance<br />

of God for proper living, think­<br />

schools of that W. L. Oldroyd<br />

city. In April,<br />

1902, he got a job as office boy in the<br />

ing, associations and ambitions." Car Service Department, Springfield;<br />

was promoted to foreman in that department<br />

in November of 1917. In<br />

March of 1919 he was transferred to<br />

Boston and given special duties in the<br />

office" of the Vice-President and was<br />

designated as statistician in January<br />

of 1920.<br />

Southworth Lancaster Rises on<br />

Boston & Albany<br />

HE Boston & Albany Railroad an­<br />

Tnounced that, effective Monday,<br />

April 2, Southworth Lancaster became<br />

Divison Freight Agent with offices at<br />

Union Station, Worcester, Mass., succeeding<br />

the late William Callanan.<br />

He was welcomed to his new position<br />

April 2 by the Worcester Traffic<br />

Association.<br />

Mr. Lancaster was born in Worcester<br />

August 8, 1893. He was educated<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

in the Worcester public schools and<br />

the Classical High School and graduated<br />

from Harvard University in<br />

1915. In June, 1915, he entered the<br />

employ of the Boston & Albany Railroad<br />

in the General Freight Office,<br />

Boston, and served in various capacities.<br />

He was appointed chief clerk to<br />

the general freight agent in October,<br />

1920. On September 1, 1923, he was<br />

appointed Foreign Freight Agent. Mr.<br />

Lancaster served on the Mexican Border<br />

with the Massachusetts National<br />

Guard in 1916 and in France with the<br />

101st Field Artillery, Twenty-sixth<br />

Division, 1917 to 1919.<br />

Henry 0. Lynch at the same time<br />

was appointed Foreign Freight Agent<br />

with offices at Room No. 211, Grain<br />

and Flour Exchange, 177 Milk Street,<br />

Boston, Mass., succeeding Southworth<br />

Lancaster, transferred to Worcester,<br />

Mass.<br />

Mr. Lynch was born in Boston, May<br />

8, 1894, and entered the service of the<br />

Boston & Albany on August 31, 1911,<br />

as a clerk in the Foreign Freight<br />

Agent's office and was appointed chief<br />

clerk, September 1, 1919. His entire<br />

service with the Boston & Albany<br />

Railroad has been in the Foreign<br />

Freight office. He served overseas<br />

with the Twenty-first Engineers—•<br />

Light <strong>Railway</strong>s, in 1918-1919.<br />

Edward Kennedy, Chief Clerk, Division<br />

Freight office, Worcester, Mass.,<br />

has been appointed Traveling Freight<br />

Agent for the Boston & Albany. He<br />

was born in Millville, Mass., September<br />

1, 1893, and entered the service of<br />

the Boston & Albany Railroad in December,<br />

1912, as a clerk in the Barre<br />

Plains freight office. He has served<br />

as Agent of the Boston & Albany at<br />

Millbury, Newton, Ashland and<br />

Brookfield and was appointed chief<br />

clerk to the divison freight agent at<br />

Worcester on December 18, 1919.<br />

Several New Directors Elected<br />

T a meeting of the Board of Directors<br />

of the West Shore Railroad<br />

Company, in Albany, April 18,<br />

Myron C. Taylor was elected a director,<br />

taking the post formerly held by<br />

the late Chauncey M. Depew.<br />

At a meeting of the Board of D.rectors<br />

of the New York & Harlem Railroad,<br />

in New York City, April 18, R.<br />

D. Starbuck, Vice-President of the<br />

New York Central Railroad, was<br />

elected a director and vice-president<br />

of the New York & Harlem Railroad<br />

and R. J. Cary, Vice-President and<br />

General Counsel, New York Central<br />

Railroad, was elected a director of the<br />

New York & Harlem Railroad.<br />

At a meeting of the Board of Directors<br />

of the Rutland Railroad, held in<br />

Rutland, Vt., April 17, Guy W. Bailey,<br />

President of the University of Vermont,<br />

Burlington, Vt., was elected a<br />

director to fill the vacancy made by<br />

the death of George T, Jarvis.<br />

C a m p U n d e r c l i f f , O p e n i n g J u n e i, A g a i n<br />

O f f e r s C h a r m s o f A d i r o n d a c k ^<br />

HE silvery beauty of moonlight<br />

Ton the lake and mysterious tremolos<br />

of shadows on the water; the<br />

crystal clearness of the air at morning<br />

when the sun comes over the trees;<br />

sports, forests, and Adirondack scenery<br />

are inducements that will bring<br />

hundreds of vacationists to Camp Undereliff<br />

again this summer.<br />

The New York Central Veterans'<br />

Association camp on Lake Placid will<br />

open June 1 and continue through<br />

September 30. Indications are that<br />

the number of visitors this year will<br />

exceed the 931 who found Camp Undereliff<br />

a haven of rest last summer.<br />

Nearly a dozen buildings will house<br />

the camp visitors. There is a separate<br />

building for the dining room, and<br />

another for the casino where dancing<br />

and entertainments are given regularly<br />

during the summer. Among<br />

other varied accommodations and<br />

amusements are tennis courts, boats<br />

for fishing, two large motor boats for<br />

moonlight excursions, and amusement<br />

grounds for youngsters.<br />

The camp is located on the Adirondack<br />

Division of the New York Central<br />

and, of course, is easily accessible<br />

from New York, Buffalo and every<br />

other point on the system. An overnight<br />

trip from New York City brings<br />

the week-end visitor in plenty of time<br />

to enjoy the opportunities of the<br />

camp.<br />

Rooms for one person are $25 per<br />

week; for two, $39 to $60 per week.<br />

Transient rates are $5 per day. Children<br />

under three years of age are<br />

charged for at a rate of $7 per week,<br />

those from three to ten at $15 per<br />

week. When separate rooms are required<br />

for children, the full *rates<br />

apply.<br />

Reservations and other details can<br />

be secured from J. K. Angell, Room<br />

1518, 466 Lexington Avenue, New<br />

York City.<br />

Veteran Representatives<br />

Meet to Arrange Omting<br />

A MEETING of representatives of<br />

all chapters of the New York<br />

Central Veterans' Association was<br />

held at the Hotel Statler, Buffalo, Friiay,<br />

April 13, to further arrange­<br />

ments, made with the co-operation of<br />

Buffalo members, for the first joint<br />

picnic.<br />

At this meeting, Dr. J. W. LeSeur<br />

was elected President of the Associated<br />

Chapters of New York Central<br />

Veterans, and W. G. Abriel, Assistant<br />

to Vice-President Jno. G. Walber, was<br />

chocen Secretary.<br />

The date selected for the picnic is<br />

Thursday, July 19. This has been<br />

announced previously in columns of<br />

the Magazine, particularly in the listing<br />

of "Coming Events." Not only<br />

will Veterans and their families be<br />

welcome at this party, but it will be<br />

open to members of the Athletic Associations<br />

and their families—indeed, to<br />

all employes of the New York Central<br />

Railroad, even though it is under the<br />

auspices of the Veterans.<br />

Each Veteran organization will undertake<br />

to dispose of strips of tickets<br />

giving picnickers access to the amusement<br />

features of Erie Beach at a very<br />

nominal cost. One reason why it is<br />

possible to give so much to the party<br />

is the virtually exclusive use of tha<br />

park the Railroad will have on the<br />

mid-week day selected.<br />

Members of 'the Veterans' Committee<br />

assembled at Buffalo for the<br />

meeting last month motored across<br />

the Peace Bridge to Fort Erie and<br />

then on to Erie Beach. They were<br />

impressed with the possibilities of this<br />

place as an amusement resort. It is<br />

well equipped with all sorts of amusement<br />

apparatus. A boat ride across<br />

the end of Lake Erie from Buffalo to<br />

Erie Beach and back constitutes the<br />

popular method of transportation<br />

during the summer months, and the<br />

cost of this is included in the strip of<br />

tickets that will be offered by representatives<br />

of the different Veterans'<br />

Associations. The strips will sell at<br />

fifty cents apiece and the value of each<br />

strip on the basis of individual purchase<br />

at the various concessions is<br />

$4.75.<br />

The ticket committee will consist of<br />

Chairman R. C. Benson of the Superintendent's<br />

office, Buffalo, assisted by<br />

C. S. McGinley, President of the New<br />

York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Buffalo. Other representatives who<br />

have agreed to serve on the ticket<br />

committee for the various chapters<br />

are as follows:<br />

Metropolitan Chapter—G. E. V. Osborne,<br />

New York.<br />

Capitol Chapter—J. G. Parsons, Albany.<br />

Adirondack Chapter—A. A. Raymond, Utica.<br />

Onondaga Chapter—W. V. McCarthy, Syracuse.<br />

R. W. & O. Pioneer Chapter—J. H. Powers,<br />

Oswego.<br />

Genesee Chapter—Thomas Silver, Rochester.<br />

Fall Brook Chapter—L. J. Cushing, Corning,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Beech Creek Chapter—P. M. Barrow, Clearfield,<br />

Pa.<br />

Scioto Chapter—John Colville.<br />

Lake Shore* Pioneer Chapter—To be designated.<br />

Chairmen were selected for the committees<br />

on reception, transportation,<br />

entertainment, sports and publicity,<br />

and each of the chapters is to select a<br />

representative and to notify C. S. Mc­<br />

Ginley, General Chairman, at Buffalo,<br />

their selections for these committees.<br />

19


20<br />

<strong>TH</strong>ERE is a widespread theory<br />

among game fishermen who<br />

make their hobby a practical<br />

study, who talk it by day and dream<br />

it by night, that the black bass is the<br />

sassiest thing that swims in American<br />

fresh waters and that the smallmouthedrepresentative<br />

of this<br />

breed is sassier<br />

than his largemouthed<br />

brother.<br />

This writer has<br />

taken both kinds<br />

over a widely<br />

separated territory,<br />

in rivers<br />

and lakes, from<br />

West Virginia to<br />

northern New<br />

York and northern<br />

Wisconsin,<br />

and if there is<br />

any difference in<br />

the fighting qualities<br />

of the black<br />

bass, no matter<br />

about the size of<br />

his mouth, it has<br />

failed to show itself<br />

in my case.<br />

The experience<br />

has been that the<br />

fish fights according<br />

to his environment<br />

and ths<br />

space in which he<br />

has to maneuver.<br />

Eighteen of the<br />

small - mouthed<br />

variety came inta<br />

my boat one day<br />

from the waters<br />

of the upper Potomac,<br />

ranging<br />

from a pound to<br />

three pounds, and<br />

every one of them<br />

fought to the bitter<br />

end, even while<br />

enmeshed in the<br />

landing net and<br />

being lifted over<br />

the side after a<br />

ten minute scrap.<br />

It was my first<br />

experience in<br />

angling for game<br />

fish with anything<br />

but a fly and I<br />

lost three big ones<br />

before I absorbed<br />

the lesson my<br />

guide was trying<br />

to instill. It was near Williamsport,<br />

on the border line of Maryland and<br />

West Virginia. If you're going to try<br />

it from somewhere in that section,<br />

take the Ohio Central unit of the New<br />

York Central Lines and pause at<br />

Charleston, West Virginia. Another<br />

branch will take you to some good<br />

point on the Potomac and you'll find<br />

plenty of sport in season.<br />

Fish with a fly if you care to, but<br />

bait is better. There are two kinds,<br />

catfish and helgramites. Use the same<br />

By Eugene Shade Bisbee<br />

rig you would with a fly. Don't kill<br />

your bait. Hook the "catty" through<br />

the lips, pole your boat to a good<br />

spot and hold it there while you let<br />

your bait slip down stream, maybe<br />

a hundred, maybe two hundred feet,<br />

according to the pool you want to<br />

reach. The "catty" will make for<br />

the bottom when you check your line.<br />

Keep your thumb on the reel, lightly.<br />

You feel a slight tug, then a harder<br />

one and away goes your line like a<br />

bullet,.the reel singing as you let it<br />

slip. At the first tug you strike, feel<br />

a sharp retort and reel in rapidly.<br />

You have lost your bass!_ That's<br />

the way this innocent did it three<br />

times before he got wise. Now try it<br />

again.<br />

:<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

In<br />

Once more down stream goes the<br />

"catty" and pulls for the bottom of<br />

the pool. Once more the quick jerk<br />

and the singing reel. This time you<br />

have patience. Your bass has caught<br />

the "catty" by the tail and is rushing<br />

down stream with him, to turn him<br />

about and swallow him at his leisure.<br />

He has to do this<br />

head first, so that<br />

those big horns<br />

on the bait will<br />

slip into his gullet.<br />

Fifty or<br />

more feet down<br />

stream from<br />

where he first<br />

grabbed the bait<br />

the bass will<br />

pause and you<br />

will feel a few<br />

slight tugs. Keep<br />

a taut line but<br />

don't strike until<br />

the game does.<br />

Bang! He's done<br />

it. Turned the<br />

"catty" around<br />

and tugged hard<br />

as he begins to<br />

slip him into his<br />

gullet. Away he<br />

goes and at the<br />

first pull is the<br />

time to strike.<br />

Snap your wrist<br />

down and the<br />

bamboo tip will<br />

do the rest and<br />

your fight is on.<br />

If he weighs<br />

three pounds or<br />

more you will<br />

think you've got<br />

a tarpon before<br />

you get him<br />

alongside the<br />

boat. And it is<br />

the hardest kind<br />

of fishing, for you<br />

have to play him<br />

in and out among<br />

the rocks and little<br />

pools. He will<br />

use every artifice<br />

to break the lina<br />

against a sharp<br />

edge, leap above<br />

the surface and<br />

try to snap his<br />

tail across the<br />

Photo by Ewlng Galloway leader, rush to­<br />

Swirling rapids and quiet pools, shaded by the overhanging greenery of tall trees, ward the boat<br />

offer many an angler, fair and otherwise, good sport for a summer holiday. There and then turn and<br />

is an abundance of such streams along every portion of the New York Central Lines. dart like an arrow<br />

in the opposite direction.<br />

And he is a powerful little beast,<br />

too, chunky and muscular and tough<br />

as a bulldog and just as sassy. He's<br />

built on the lines of a Sam Langford<br />

and can take an awful beating before<br />

he's licked. Your light tackle will<br />

have all it can do to answer your<br />

call, but he is not likely to get away<br />

unless he breaks it, for the "catty"<br />

itself helps to hold him with those<br />

little horns, that act like the barbs<br />

of your hook, for if he comes out at<br />

all he has to do it backward. Ten<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 21<br />

minutes and you have him alongside<br />

the boat. Lift him in with the net<br />

and slip his gill over the scale hook.<br />

Now please gently rap him at the<br />

base of the skull with a little club<br />

and put him out of action at once,<br />

rather than to let him die of suffocation,<br />

as all guides do. In these<br />

ten minutes you will have had more<br />

excitement than the average trout<br />

will give you, but most of us fly<br />

fishermen prefer to wade and cast<br />

rather than angle from a boat among<br />

rocks and with live bait.<br />

With the helgramite the action is<br />

identical and either bait is good. The<br />

only thing to know, except how to<br />

handle a split bamboo, is to wait until<br />

he has made his second tug at the<br />

bait before you strike.<br />

Now let's try the large-mouth black<br />

bass and in an entirely different environment.<br />

It's quite a jump from<br />

the Potomac to Lake Champlain and<br />

there may be some criticism that<br />

these game fishing spots are rather<br />

remote. They are, but it must not<br />

be forgotten that the best game is<br />

always "just over the hill in that<br />

other lake." Wild creatures do not<br />

crave the companionship of man, who<br />

is at best a dirty animal and inclined<br />

to mess up Nature wherever he makes<br />

his abode. Game fishes like the primitive<br />

and the gamier they are the<br />

wilder they like their homes. They<br />

are invariably from a few hours to<br />

a few days away from you if you<br />

happen to live in the midst of civilization,<br />

but you will not go wrons: if<br />

you try Champlain, and the New York<br />

Central reaches pretty close to it from<br />

several branches. North Hero, Vermont,<br />

is our destination this time.<br />

The big ones are there, and big pickerel,<br />

too. Lots of 'em. And hungry,<br />

always hungry and always sassy.<br />

One Morning in August<br />

Two of us, with a guide slowly<br />

rowing, moved out over the glassy<br />

surface one marvelous August morning.<br />

Seven miles straight across was<br />

St. Albans. Little islands dotted the<br />

lake here and there. Moving along<br />

slowly, the guide took us in a big<br />

circle, half a mile in diameter. A<br />

wooded island ahead was skirted as<br />

we turned to the left. I had out one<br />

hundred and fifty feet of silk line,<br />

with a twelve foot leader and a spinning<br />

copper spoon about an inch long<br />

and half as wide, with a double hook.<br />

Nothing more. As usual, the guide<br />

was using a hand line and so was my<br />

companion. They only wanted fish.<br />

I wanted sport, so I used the old reliable<br />

split bamboo that had been<br />

good for trout and salmon in Nova<br />

Scotia and Cape Breton.<br />

We were halfway between the<br />

wooded island and a sharp point of<br />

land that projected into the lake from<br />

the_ eastward side of North Hero—<br />

which is an island, too, and a county<br />

of Vermont—and in nearly an hour's<br />

trolling nothing had happened, when<br />

out of the glassy surface some three<br />

hundred yards astern there leaped a<br />

shimmering, bronze-black object that<br />

fell back with a tremendous splash.<br />

And we had just crossed that spot,<br />

too. Well, that's the luck of fishing.<br />

The guide saw the splash and began<br />

to turn the boat.<br />

Putting It Over<br />

By J. M. English<br />

{Miles away in a shady ravine—)<br />

BIG brown trout, lone dweller in a deep, wide pool<br />

Of darkling water, is hunted. But he is wise and hard to fool.<br />

His eyes are sharp, his hearing a radio bat'ry of rarest powers,<br />

And only long years of patiently practised stealth of ours<br />

Can approach him unknown, from rear or abeam,<br />

As he floats suspended in a wary poise in the stream.<br />

(Quiet like a cloud-shadow we reach a position, and—)<br />

A quartering cast, clear out to the fall, above the spray,<br />

Where the foam-flecked current dashes down and ripples away.<br />

Simulating a death struggle our minnow to-us-ward spinning,<br />

Then a big flash of brown, with a sure grasp, winning<br />

Down into the depths, line and swivel borne out of sight<br />

While our supple steel bends nearly double to the fight.<br />

(We are uncertain whether line and leader will hold.)<br />

Below he sulks; while gathering energy he rests;<br />

Then a headlong rush that the strong line tests,<br />

But a skillful finger on the whirling reel, a double brake<br />

Limits the yards of taut line he would take.<br />

Frenzied, a jerk, a twist, and a run, then free of the flood he bounds,<br />

But that relentless pull tires, and at last it wins—three pounds.<br />

"Guess we'll go back an' get that<br />

fellow," he said.<br />

I didn't believe him, but he was the<br />

guide and I kept still as we again<br />

circled over the course. I was carefully<br />

measuring distances this time,<br />

just to test the native's insolent assurance<br />

that that particular bass was<br />

going to wait to have us feed him a<br />

copper spoon. The native had out a<br />

lure with enough hooks to catch a<br />

shark and hold him. They take no<br />

chances. They want fish and once<br />

they hook one he never gets away.<br />

The boat crossed the spot where the<br />

fish had broken water and I confess<br />

I began to feel little creeps as my<br />

spoon, whirling in the sunlit waters,<br />

came closer. It was lightly leaded and<br />

traveling not more than four feet beneath<br />

the surface at the gait we were<br />

moving. There was forty feet of<br />

water there between the island and<br />

the point. The tip of my rod was<br />

vertical, perhaps five degrees back,<br />

to protect it from snapping if I got<br />

a sudden big strike. I did. So hard<br />

that I thought it must have caught<br />

bottom.<br />

The Snag Races Out<br />

Instantly the guide laid on his oars<br />

and then backed slightly, as my snag<br />

darted toward the state of Massachusetts<br />

at a rate about four times<br />

that of the Twentieth Century and<br />

my reel sang with the voice of a telegraph<br />

wire in a wintry gale. I held<br />

him in as much as I dare with my<br />

thumb, which was burning as the silk<br />

ran out. He took nearly two hundred<br />

feet before he decided to change his<br />

direction and I was then playing a<br />

big-mouthed bass with a nasty temper<br />

on three hundred and fifty feet<br />

of line in an open lake. It was the<br />

greatest sport I ever had in my life.<br />

There was plenty of line left, for I<br />

was carrying the salmon tackle of<br />

six hundred feet, but I didn't want<br />

him to have too much. It was my<br />

first big one and at that moment I<br />

was certain he weighed ten pounds,<br />

for I knew that tradition had it that<br />

bass of that size had been taken in<br />

this lake. Not many, 'tis true, but<br />

some. The average is around three<br />

pounds, with occasional ones as big<br />

as six pounds.<br />

It being my first experience, I was<br />

anxious to test his strength and endurance<br />

with what I knew of trout<br />

of equal weight. I let him run and<br />

jump and zig-zag and sound and circle<br />

and rush toward the boat and<br />

dash away again. For not less than<br />

twenty minutes he kept it up without<br />

pause or rest, trying everything<br />

he had to get away from those two<br />

hooks. No use, and presently he began<br />

to slow down and I reeled in and<br />

brought him up to a hundred feet of<br />

line. He came nearer the surface and<br />

at once renewed his fight, but not<br />

so strong now and coming gradually<br />

nearer and nearer as I reeled in. Half<br />

an hour from the moment he struck<br />

the spoon he was alongside, still fighting,<br />

still straining every muscle to<br />

get away, a magnificent specimen,<br />

nearly two feet long and a quarter<br />

as wide, with bulging back and a<br />

bulldog head that knew no defeat<br />

save absolute exhaustion. The guide<br />

reached over the side and slipped his<br />

fingers through the gills, lifting him<br />

into the boat. I hung him on the<br />

scale.<br />

Six pounds, four ounces of bigmouthed<br />

black bass. He had fought<br />

for half an hour with amazing energy,<br />

the scrappiest six pounds that ever


12<br />

came to my lure. My experience is<br />

that a trout of equal weight would<br />

have quit in half the time. And, as<br />

for his brother, the small-mouth, I<br />

have yet to note a difference in the<br />

fighting instinct. During a fortnight<br />

at North Hero I took from six to<br />

eighteen a day, all between one and<br />

four pounds, with quite a number of<br />

pickerel. I don't care for the last<br />

named. They fight like a shark, rather<br />

than a bass or a trout or a salmon.<br />

The range of the basses is from<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> to the Gulf of Mexico and<br />

from the Atlantic Coast to the Rocky<br />

Mountains, where they live in the<br />

lakes, rivers and smaller streams.<br />

They all like cool waters, the smallmouthed<br />

preferring them cooler and<br />

swifter than are demanded by their<br />

brothers of the big mouth. Many<br />

anglers call it the gamiest of American<br />

fishes, for it will take the artificial<br />

fly, the baited hook or the troll<br />

with equal avidity and in a fashion<br />

to thrill the most experienced of anglers.<br />

The small-mouthed variety will<br />

weigh from one to six, or even eight<br />

pounds, but the thrill will be just as<br />

intense with the little fellows as with<br />

the big brother. If you take one for<br />

the first time and are really meticulous<br />

about whether he is a smallmouthed<br />

or a large-mouthed, your<br />

curiosity may be satisfied by counting<br />

the scales on his cheek. The largemouthed<br />

have ten rows of scales, the<br />

other species have seventeen rows.<br />

The mouth of the large-mouth extends<br />

back of the eye, that of the<br />

small-mouth even with the anterior<br />

margin of the eye. Each fish is usually<br />

almost black, but if there are<br />

any colorings the small-mouthed will<br />

show vertical bars of black on the<br />

sides, while the large-mouthed will<br />

have no vertical bars but will show<br />

a broad band along the side from<br />

gills to tail.<br />

The family habits of this game fish<br />

are extremely interesting to the real<br />

sportsman. Both species are very<br />

zealous in their breeding habits and<br />

are actually ferocious in their guardianship<br />

of home and family. The fish,<br />

which have been in schools throughout<br />

the winter, become paired in early<br />

spring and begin the preparation of<br />

their nests. The nest is located in<br />

comparatively shallow water and usually<br />

consists of fine gravel brushed<br />

into a circular mass a foot and a half<br />

or two feet in diameter. Or, sometimes<br />

it is merely a rounded oval<br />

area on a gravel, clay or mud bottom,<br />

from which all foreign material is<br />

removed by the parent fishes. When<br />

the eggs are deposited they become<br />

attached to the bottom and are thenceforth<br />

continually guarded by one of<br />

the parents, while the matter above<br />

the nest is kept in continuous agitation<br />

by a gentle motion of the fins<br />

of the guardian fish. Sometimes both<br />

parents stand guard at once, in order<br />

to keep intruders away from the eggs.<br />

From two thousand to ten thousand<br />

eggs are deposited by one fish and<br />

the period of incubation is from one<br />

to three weeks. When the young<br />

emerge they remain in the nest for<br />

several days while the yolk sac is<br />

being absorbed, when they rise in a<br />

school and hover over the nest for<br />

several days more before scattering.<br />

During this post-incubation period<br />

the parents continue their guardianship,<br />

circling about the nest and<br />

keeping all enemies away, at the same<br />

time preventing the family from wandering.<br />

Finally, the young must separate<br />

in order to find food and they<br />

are then driven by the parents into<br />

dense marine vegetation or shoal<br />

water, where they are deserted and<br />

left to shift for themselves. Their<br />

food consists of minute animals and<br />

insects and each other, for they are<br />

all cannibals and this cannibalism<br />

continues through life, the adult fishes<br />

being voracious feeders, eating all<br />

kinds of fishes, as well as small mammals,<br />

frogs, tadpoles, snakes, worms,<br />

insects and a great variety of vegetable<br />

matter.<br />

Is it any wonder that they will take<br />

an artificial fly or a copper spoon,<br />

or that they are full of the devil<br />

when they discover that they have<br />

been fooled and are on the end of a<br />

silk-worm gut and a silk line attached<br />

to a man?<br />

W. M. Havlland James H. Quigley<br />

Michael Sabroski Charles A. Goss<br />

RECENTLY RETIRED VETERANS<br />

Mr. Haviland left the service early this<br />

year at Jersey Shore, Pa., while Mr.<br />

Quigley, of Weehawken, was a ferryboat<br />

engineer until March 1. Michael<br />

Sabroski, Section Foreman on the<br />

Saginaw Division, had served the<br />

Michigan Central forty-one and onehalf<br />

years. Mr. Goss made his farewell<br />

run on a decorated engine in the<br />

Buffalo Yards the first of the year.<br />

Clinton Auxiliary Gives Dance<br />

"in»ETWEEN six and seven hundred<br />

persons were present at the first<br />

public reception and dance of the De-<br />

Witt Clinton Women's Auxiliary of<br />

the Capitol Chanter Veterans' Association.<br />

The affair was held at the<br />

Vincentian Institute of Albany,<br />

April 10.<br />

Besides Mrs. Worthington, the reception<br />

committee comprised the officers<br />

and wives of the Capitol Chapter<br />

New York Central Lines Muguzine fur .May, 192S<br />

and the officers of the auxiliary,<br />

among them Miss Esther McGill, Vice-<br />

President, and Mesdames John W.<br />

Lyon, Recording Secretary; Fred<br />

MacMartin, Corresponding Secretary;<br />

L. H. Albers, Historian; O. McAvoy,<br />

Oliver Earing, Samuel Knower, W.<br />

H. Grassman, Oliver Dansberry and<br />

Louis Henion, Directors.<br />

D. A. Carver Now in Florida<br />

HE recent retirement of D. A.<br />

TCarver from the New York Central<br />

ends a career of forty-five years<br />

that Mr. Carver<br />

has been with the<br />

Railroad as fireman<br />

and engineman.<br />

In his new<br />

role of leisure Mr.<br />

Carver will continue<br />

as a booster<br />

of the company<br />

he served faithfully<br />

for the<br />

greater part of<br />

his life.<br />

Starting as a<br />

fireman at Collinwood,<br />

Ohio, in<br />

1882, he was pro­ D. A. Carver<br />

moted to engineman in 1887 and con<br />

tinued in that capacity. His last few<br />

days of service were marked by visits<br />

from friends who extended to him<br />

their best wishes for a long and welldeserved<br />

rest.<br />

Mr. Carver is at present living at<br />

706 Robson Street, Tampa, Florida.<br />

C. W. Y. Currie Made Publicity<br />

Manager<br />

HARLES C. PAULDING, Vice-<br />

C President, Public Relations, New<br />

York Central Lines, on April 15, announced<br />

the appointment of C.W.Y.<br />

Currie as Publicity Manager, New<br />

York Central Lines.<br />

George Krause, Jr.<br />

EORGE KRAUSE, Jr., sixty-<br />

G seven, General Freight Agent of<br />

the Big Four <strong>Railway</strong>, who completed<br />

fifty years of service with that road<br />

on December 1, 1927, died suddenly<br />

April 27, in Cincinnati. He was one<br />

of the most popular employes of the<br />

Big Four. He also was president of<br />

the Cincinnati Traffic Club.<br />

Mr. Krause started in 1877 as a<br />

messenger in the freight office at<br />

Cleveland. At that time the name of<br />

the railroad was Cleveland, Columbus,<br />

Cincinnati & Indianapolis and the line<br />

from Cleveland to Indianapolis was<br />

known as the "Bee Line."<br />

John Cummins<br />

OHN CUMMINS, eighty-three, re­<br />

J tired Big Four Engineman, died at<br />

the home of his son, the Rev. James F.<br />

Cummins, in Cleveland, April 8. Burial<br />

took place in Calvary Cemetery.<br />

Mr. Cummins was a native of Ireland,<br />

but came to this country with his<br />

parents at an early age. He started<br />

work with the Railroad, firing a woodburner<br />

in 1869. He was made an engineman<br />

three years later and worked<br />

with the Big Four until he was retired.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 23<br />

West Albany employes from the Motive Power, Car and Stores Departments at a Safety meeting at the Railroad Y. M.<br />

C. A., where they pledged themselves to renewed efforts on behalf of fewer casualties.<br />

West Albany Employes Strive<br />

to Improve Safety Record<br />

Ti/irOTIVE Power, Car and Stores<br />

IvJL Department employes and officials<br />

attended a special Safety meeting<br />

at West Albany Shops April 16,<br />

which was addressed by Charles E.<br />

Hill, General Safety Agent.<br />

Mr. Hill, who also attended all of<br />

the Division and principal shop Safety<br />

meetings on the Line East during<br />

April, showed the West Albany men in<br />

chart form their Safety performances<br />

during the years of 1926 and 1927.<br />

The Motive Power Department in<br />

1926 had 151 employe casualties, and<br />

in 1927, 107. The Car Department<br />

reduced its casualties from 30 to 17.<br />

In 1926 the Stores Department had<br />

23 employe casualties, which were cut<br />

to 14 in 1927.<br />

Further reductions in employe casualties<br />

were also made at this point<br />

during January and February, 1928,<br />

under the corresponding months of<br />

1927. The names of some of those<br />

attending this meeting, in the front<br />

row of the picture, from left to right,<br />

are as follows:<br />

F. P. McGirr, Shops Safety Agent;<br />

C. M. Thomas, Safety Agent, Mohawk<br />

Division; George Fox, Superintendent<br />

of Shops, Car Department; John Parsons,<br />

SuDerintendent of Shops, Motive<br />

Power Department; Charles E. Hill,<br />

General Safety Agent; John T. Grow,<br />

District Master Car Builder; E. C.<br />

Totten, General Car Foreman, Weehawken,<br />

and John Seim, District<br />

Storekeeper. In the back row are C.<br />

W. Adams, Division General Car<br />

Foreman, and C. D. Shaff, Supervising<br />

Safety Agent.<br />

S i x R o a d s i n Safety B a l l y at Y o i a e g s t o w e<br />

^CONSIDERABLE impetus was<br />

given to Safety work among employes<br />

by the Co-operative Railroad<br />

Safety Rally held in Youngstown,<br />

Ohio, April 10. Nearly four thousand<br />

employes from six railroads entering<br />

the city crowded the Stambaugh Auditorium<br />

to hear addresses and music.<br />

Dr. J. W. LeSeur, Special Representative<br />

of President P. E. Crowley of<br />

the New York Central Lines, was the<br />

principal speaker.<br />

Dr. LeSeur urged railroad employes<br />

to inculcate Safety in the hearts of<br />

everyone they met, whether at work<br />

or at home. He pointed out that<br />

wealth is not the greatest human attainment,<br />

but rather, service to humanity.<br />

" 'It is more blessed to give<br />

than to receive'," he reminded his<br />

hearers, "and it is service that makes<br />

genuine friendship. Is life worth living?<br />

That all depends on you."<br />

Dr. LeSeur praised the co-operation<br />

given the railroads by city officials in<br />

helping to reduce deaths and accidents<br />

at railroads crossings and at stations.<br />

The greatest reduction in fatalities, he<br />

said, is due to instruction in proper<br />

Safety methods.<br />

The surgeon's address was preceded<br />

by an introduction by Judge George<br />

H. Gessner, who afterward expressed<br />

the audience's appreciation for the<br />

surgeon's visit and invited him to come<br />

again. F. H. Babcock was chairman<br />

of the program.<br />

A motion picture, "The Fair of the<br />

Iron Horse," was shown and several<br />

musical numbers were given by local<br />

talent.<br />

The railroads participating in the<br />

rally were the Baltimore & Ohio, Erie<br />

Railroad, Pennsylvania, Lake Erie &<br />

Eastern, Pittsburgh & Lake Erie and<br />

the New York Central.<br />

Neil Mooney Heads Agents'<br />

Association in East<br />

EIL MOONEY, Assistant Gen­<br />

N eral Passenger Agent for the<br />

New York Central in New York, has<br />

been elected President of the General<br />

Eastern Passenger<br />

tion.<br />

Agents' Associa­<br />

Upon his induction into office last<br />

month, he was warmly praised by Edgar<br />

S. Barney, retiring president, who<br />

is General Passenger Agent of the<br />

Hudson River Day Line. Addressing<br />

Mr. Mooney, Mr. Barney said:<br />

"You have been honored by election<br />

to the highest office within the gift of<br />

this Association. It is an enviable<br />

office to hold, and richly do you deserve<br />

it. Your fine manhood, your<br />

sterling character, your uniform courtesy,<br />

your winsome smile, your magnanimous<br />

trait of which you, yourself,<br />

have so often told me—of striving to<br />

perform some kindly deed toward<br />

someone every day—all make you the<br />

man whom we delight to honor and<br />

follow. . . .<br />

"I place in your hand this gavel as<br />

a symbol of authority to rule, and I<br />

ask you similarly to transfer it to<br />

your successor. I know you will<br />

wield it in justice. I ask you to wield<br />

it in mercy."


24<br />

Ernest Fisher, Terre Haute, ploye of the New York Central. Now,<br />

after thirty years as Baggage Master<br />

Retires from Big Four<br />

at Seneca and fifty years as a New<br />

RNEST FISHER, better known to York Central employe, Mr. Riley is<br />

E his fellow workers as "Pete," retiring to a well-merited rest.<br />

washed his last locomotive boiler at He started as a section hand on the<br />

Duane Enginehouse, Terre Haute, Geneva-Lyons section which he helped<br />

Ind., March 31, to build. Later he succeeded P. H.<br />

after thirty-eight Burns as Baggage Master at Seneca<br />

years of faithful Falls. Since that time, a local stat­<br />

service on the Big istician has figured that "Patsy" has<br />

Four Railroad. unloaded 153,000 trains and more than<br />

Mr. Fisher was 2,500,000 parcels of baggage. He has<br />

born in Germany, swept out the station 22,000 times and<br />

March 13, 1858. built more than 8,200 fires to keep the<br />

At the age of public warm.<br />

t w e n t y-two he<br />

came to America,<br />

J. F. Eidmann Remains True to<br />

locating in Terre<br />

Haut e, on the<br />

Road<br />

banks of the HOUGH retired, John F. Eidmann<br />

Wabash, where Twill still serve the New York Cen­<br />

he has since made<br />

tral. He writes:<br />

Ernest Fisher his home.<br />

"The New York<br />

He started in the railroad game<br />

Central will con­<br />

with the old Vandalia Railroad in<br />

tinue to have my<br />

1882, and after seven years' service<br />

active interest<br />

with that road he came to the Big<br />

and co-operation<br />

Four, which was then known as the<br />

and if at any<br />

Indianapolis & St. Louis, in Septem­<br />

time I find it posber,<br />

1890, and he has been with this<br />

sible to furnish<br />

company ever since. During his serv­<br />

information that<br />

ice he has served as engine wiper,<br />

will be of assist­<br />

hostler and boiler washer.<br />

ance in obtaining<br />

Mr. Fisher has been a steady work­<br />

business, I will<br />

er and enjoyed good health. On the<br />

make it a point to<br />

day of his retirement he was present­<br />

do so."<br />

ed with a fine traveling bag and a<br />

A native of<br />

bouquet of flowers by his fellow J. F. Eidmann Kingston, N. Y.,<br />

workers.<br />

Mr. Eidmann entered railroad service<br />

in 1885 on a construction train out of<br />

"Patsy" Riley Leaves Service at<br />

Kingston. During 1887 he was a<br />

Seneca Falls<br />

wiper on the Wallkill Valley Railroad<br />

HEN Seneca Falls was a "wood­ and was later promoted to fireman.<br />

Wing station" for locomotives, Pat­ In 1889, he transferred to the West<br />

rick Riley was already a veteran em- Shore Railroad and has been on the<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

River Division as fireman and engineman<br />

ever since. Mr. Eidmann makes<br />

his home at 933 Danielson Street,<br />

North Bergen, N. J.<br />

West Shore Man Retires<br />

ONRAD C. HEINECKE, Night<br />

C Assistant Foreman in the Weehawken<br />

Car Department on the River<br />

Division, having<br />

reached the age<br />

of seventy years<br />

on March 5, was<br />

retired on pension<br />

on March 31.<br />

Mr. Heinecke<br />

began his career<br />

with the New<br />

York Central as<br />

a car cleaner<br />

June 5, 1902, and<br />

has had unbroken<br />

service until the<br />

date of his retirement.<br />

He was<br />

Conrad Heinecke advanced to car<br />

repairer, then inspector, and on February<br />

1, 1907, he was promoted to<br />

Assistant Foreman and held this position<br />

since.<br />

On April 2 Mr. Heinecke was presented<br />

with a wing arm chair, a watch<br />

chain and a ten dollar gold piece by<br />

his associates for which he thanked<br />

the boys in his straightforward way,<br />

admonishing them all to cling to the<br />

Safety habit in the pursuit of their<br />

duties.<br />

She Never Saw One<br />

Trying to be brutally frank to a<br />

flapper, we told her that her hair<br />

looked like a mop.<br />

"What does a mop look like?" she<br />

asked.<br />

Forty-seven years of Big Four service were culminated In a triumphal trip from Peoria to Indianapolis April 1 when<br />

Charles C. Carey, Englneman, drove a gaily bedecked engine on his farewell run before being retired at the age of seventy.<br />

Friends, fellow employes and officers of the road greeted him as he left the Union Station at Peoria and again when he<br />

pulled into his home city, Indianapolis. Conductor George Clark and Fireman L. Lawhorn, his team-mates on the trip,<br />

are shown with him in the picture.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 25<br />

Eating T o Live B y Choosing Proper Foods<br />

I<br />

T was breakfast time. At the<br />

table next to ours, in a famous<br />

restaurant in Hollywood, a man<br />

thought he was eating his breakfast—<br />

which he was—but in so doing he was<br />

also committing a crime. Not that<br />

eating breakfast in general is to be<br />

branded criminal, but in some instances<br />

it is, and this was one of them.<br />

The criminal was the man and the<br />

victim was also himself.<br />

"Some breakfast that baby's eating,"<br />

commented the gentleman with<br />

whom I was having a "breakfast conference."<br />

"Do you suppose he'll eat<br />

any lunch?"<br />

"Yes," I replied without hesitation.<br />

"And he'll probably choose a menu as<br />

atrocious as the one he now is falling<br />

upon."<br />

I glanced over at the table again<br />

and mentally noted the array of food.<br />

A cereal was disappearing. Next<br />

there was a stack of wheat cakes<br />

which I watched the man smother in<br />

rich syrup. There was toasted bread<br />

made from wheat flour and on a platter<br />

at his right there was a huge Tbone<br />

steak. When I glanced over at<br />

him fifteen minutes later he was swallowing<br />

the last of the wheat cakes,<br />

leaving the dishes in front of him<br />

empty and clean. Then he rose and<br />

walked away, blase and stupid, intoxicated<br />

with food.<br />

This business of eating has gradually<br />

been undergoing a change until,<br />

in the present era, it has been changed<br />

from an elemental physiologic function<br />

to a baneful vice. Instead of<br />

eating to live many of us now live to<br />

eat. That comment inspires a word<br />

of counsel to those falling into the<br />

latter class. It is: Eat heartily while<br />

the chance is there for it won't last<br />

long. The life insurance people know<br />

that and act accordingly. Our crime<br />

lies in eating too much of the wrong<br />

things and none of the things that we<br />

should eat.<br />

Food for Fuel and Repair Work<br />

But let us leave the unhappy subject<br />

of the fate of those who eat their<br />

way to heaven and instead discuss<br />

some of the elemental facts concerning<br />

this business of eating.<br />

The original purpose is obvious<br />

enough. We eat to stoke the fires of<br />

life and to repair that which the wear<br />

and tear of time have worn off. But<br />

to do so intelligently we should know<br />

something about the requirements<br />

both as to quantity and quality. Most<br />

of us know that it is quite easy to<br />

choke a fire with too much fuel and<br />

we also know that it is not feasible<br />

to fire a furnace successfully with<br />

sand or scraps of iron. The same<br />

dogma applies in firing the human<br />

furnace. If we want to extinguish<br />

the fires of life we can choke them<br />

with too much food, and unless we<br />

feed them the right kind of fuels the<br />

physiologic processes of life are not<br />

going to carry on in a normal manner.<br />

To discuss the quantity and<br />

quality of food necessary for properly<br />

carrying on the processes of life is<br />

By Dr. G. Ellington Jorgenson<br />

the purpose of this and the succeeding<br />

articles.<br />

Before it is possible intelligently to<br />

discuss the quantity and balancing of<br />

the food intake the various important<br />

body requirements found in food must<br />

be understood. Hence food qualities<br />

will be discussed first.<br />

The Five Types of Food<br />

There are five important food factors<br />

necessary for continuation of life.<br />

They are carbohydrates, fats, proteins,<br />

mineral substances and vitamins.<br />

Added to that there is an important<br />

state of body being which is<br />

dependent upon the foods eaten. It<br />

is the reaction of the tissues and tissue<br />

fluids. Normally the fluids and<br />

tissues of the body are and remain<br />

within certain limits of alkalinity.<br />

Any very marked.variation from this<br />

arbitrary point of alkalinity is antagonistic<br />

to life and may cause death.<br />

Let us first consider the carbohydrates<br />

and fats. The former are<br />

composed of all the sugars and<br />

starches; the latter are all the animal<br />

and vegetable oils and fats found<br />

in food. The role played by these<br />

substances is to provide heat and energy.<br />

In the process of burning in<br />

the body they give off heat and energy.<br />

Thus they are the power by which we<br />

accomplish things and by which we<br />

are kept warm.<br />

In burning they are reduced mainly<br />

to water and carbon dioxide. The latter<br />

is an acid gas which we get rid of<br />

by exhaling; in other words this waste<br />

product is eliminated mainly through<br />

the lungs. If the quantity of carbohydrates<br />

and fats is equal to the<br />

amount of energy and heat required,<br />

a balance is struck. If we eat more<br />

of these foods than we need for heat<br />

and energy they are changed into fats<br />

and stored in and upon the body.<br />

Thus we gain in weight and become<br />

fat.<br />

The proteins are foods rich in nitrogen<br />

and, in varying quantities,<br />

phosphorus and sulphur. These foods<br />

are composed of the meats, fish, eggs<br />

and legumes (peas and beans). It is<br />

from these foods that the body obtains<br />

materials with which to repair<br />

itself. Obviously a certain quantity<br />

of these foods is necessary for maintaining<br />

a normal body, and this quantity<br />

varies, depending upon the oc-<br />

The original Morrissanla Station on<br />

the New York & Harlem Railroad,<br />

from the photograph collection of<br />

Randall Comfort.<br />

cupation of the individual concerned.<br />

The protein requirements of the body<br />

are quite small; even in the face of<br />

moderately strenuous exercise. In<br />

fact, they are far less than what is<br />

usually consumed by the average person<br />

who eats meats or allied foods<br />

three times a day.<br />

As in the case of the carbohydrates<br />

and fats, the proteins are reduced to<br />

simpler compounds within the body.<br />

That which is needed for repairing<br />

the effects of time and work is used<br />

and the residue burned, in the main,<br />

into water and the respirable acid gas,<br />

carbon dioxide. But, as also is the<br />

case in the instance of carbohydrates<br />

and fats (fats especially) there is<br />

always some ash left over from the<br />

proteins burned. Again we may, for<br />

illustrative purposes, mention the old<br />

family furnace. In firing a furnace<br />

we have learned (in addition to the<br />

patience-sapping monotony of wielding<br />

a coal shovel) that although most<br />

of the fuel burns into gases that flow<br />

out through the chimney, there is always<br />

a residue of ash left which must<br />

be carried out. The same applies in<br />

the burning of foods in the body.<br />

There is always an ash residue left<br />

over which must be cast off by the<br />

body.<br />

Minerals for the Human System<br />

The mineral requirements of the<br />

body are a subject that of late has<br />

claimed the attention of many workers,<br />

and there is still much to be<br />

learned about the role of mineral salts<br />

and the quantity necessary for maintaining<br />

a normal body. But there is<br />

already adequate evidence clearly to<br />

prove that they are necessary. There<br />

are a number of reasons, but there<br />

are two reasons which the average<br />

layman can readily understand. The<br />

tissues and bones are composed of<br />

highly complex substances in which<br />

the inorganic elements such as iron,<br />

sulphur, calcium, potassium, sodium,<br />

iodine, phosphorus, etc., are important<br />

component parts. That is one reason.<br />

Another pertains to the reaction of<br />

the body fluids and tissues. It has<br />

previously been intimated that the tissue<br />

fluids are kept at (or near) a<br />

certain definite point of alkalinity.<br />

This is maintained by the available<br />

mineral salts.<br />

The vitamins are substances concerning<br />

which we as yet know little<br />

save that they are absolutely essential<br />

if the well-being of the body and its<br />

growth are to be maintained. They<br />

will be discussed more in detail a little<br />

later.<br />

The fixed point of alkalinity of the<br />

tissues and tissue fluids, which has<br />

previously been mentioned, can be<br />

maintained if foodstuffs that are alkaline<br />

in their end-ash products are consumed<br />

in quantities to balance and<br />

thus neutralize the acids produced by<br />

foods that are acid in their end-ash<br />

products.<br />

With this brief discussion of the<br />

various types of foods, food accessories,<br />

their purpose and fate after<br />

being consumed, we are now in position<br />

to understand better a discussion


2b New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192H<br />

on quantities of food and food balancing.<br />

Almost everyone has heard the<br />

word calorie used in connection with<br />

foods and diets, and those who have<br />

studied physics know that a calorie is<br />

a unit indicating the quantity of heat<br />

necessary to raise a fixed quantity of<br />

water one degree Centigrade. In dietetics<br />

a calorie means the same thing<br />

and it is a unit used to measure the<br />

value of foods as heat and energy producers.<br />

Out of this rather complex study<br />

has come a knowledge of the number<br />

of calories expended daily by different<br />

individuals engaged in different occupations.<br />

And by the same token, the<br />

number of food calories necessary per<br />

day for each individual is known.<br />

With the calorie value per ounce of<br />

food in our possession it is quite simple<br />

to estimate the quantity of food<br />

necessary. And by knowing the chemical<br />

value of foods per calorie it is<br />

also a simple matter to estimate the<br />

quantity of each kind of food; in<br />

other words, it is relatively easy to<br />

work out a balanced diet. And a balanced<br />

diet is one that supplies the<br />

various chemical substances of foodstuffs<br />

in the quantities necessary for<br />

maintaining the body in a normal<br />

state of being.<br />

2,500 Calories a Day<br />

It has been found that an adult person<br />

engaged in ordinary light occupations<br />

such as-the duties of professional<br />

men, salesmen and housekeeping, requires<br />

approximately 2,500 calories of<br />

food a day. For those who do hard<br />

manual labor 3,500 to 4,000 calories<br />

are required. In the young it has<br />

been found that children up to one<br />

year old require about 1,000 calories;<br />

children from one to four years old<br />

require about 1,500 calories; children<br />

from four to ten years old require<br />

from 1,500 to 2,500 calories and children<br />

in the years of adolescence require<br />

up to 6,000 calories.<br />

Obviously there are factors involved<br />

that cause variations in the food requirements<br />

of people in general. Some<br />

of these factors are age, sex, temperature<br />

of environments and individual<br />

characteristics. Thus athletic<br />

youths require 4,000 to 6,000 calories<br />

while persons seventy or eighty years<br />

old require only 2,000 calories. Females,<br />

in general, require less food<br />

than males. (But that does not mean<br />

that young women are to starve themselves.)<br />

During cold weather the<br />

caloric food requirements are higher<br />

than in warm weather. Thus it requires<br />

some 8,000 calories for a man<br />

to live and maintain normal body conditions<br />

in the Arctic regions.<br />

With regard to balancing a diet,<br />

such is quite possible. In fact, a<br />

scientifically balanced diet can be<br />

worked out, but in every-day practice<br />

absolute accuracy is not so essential.<br />

In the main the points of importance<br />

are concerned with the quantity of<br />

protein consumed and the quantity of<br />

carbohydrates and fats. For the man<br />

who requires a total daily intake of<br />

2,500 calories of food, 400 to 500<br />

calories of protein are sufficient. To<br />

balance properly the carbohydrate and<br />

the fat intake this same person should<br />

eat a carbohydrate caloric value of<br />

1,200 and a fat caloric value of 900.<br />

Reduced to common weights the intake<br />

would be something as follows:<br />

Protein intake, four ounces; carbohydrate<br />

intake, one hundred ounces; and<br />

fat intake, three ounces. By referring<br />

to any standard table of the food<br />

values of food in ounces the reader<br />

will gain an idea of how much to eat.<br />

But ordinarily this is not necessary if<br />

The Sugar Camp<br />

By Dan G. St owe<br />

Claim Department, Cleveland<br />

HEN breath of spring awakes<br />

W once more<br />

To life the sleeping trees,<br />

The maple's luscious sweets more<br />

rich<br />

Than stores of honey bees,<br />

Are filtered through their sap veins<br />

In drops of crystal blood;<br />

And yielded at the campfires,<br />

In the dark aisles of the wood.<br />

I loved to tend at night the fires,<br />

Within whose throbbing glow<br />

Were forged the happiest memories<br />

It's been my lot to know.<br />

Like bridal veils the fleecy clouds<br />

Of fragrant vapor rise;<br />

So soft, and white, like some sweet<br />

soul<br />

From out God's paradise.<br />

How quiet the night, except the<br />

breeze<br />

From some far southern clime;<br />

And tinkling drippings of the sap,<br />

Beating liquid time.<br />

Up in the sky's dark canopy<br />

The stars are shining bright<br />

And there seems a wondrous mystery<br />

In the shadows of the night.<br />

Awakened from my reveries<br />

I hear a joyful sound;<br />

Going to have some visitors,<br />

And I must hustle 'round.<br />

Eggs boiled in sap, some sandwiches,<br />

Home-made bread and ham,<br />

Warm syrup, heart-shaped sugar<br />

cakes,<br />

Marmalade, and jam.<br />

Open the fire-doors of the arch,<br />

Send up a starry shower;<br />

Let years of closest friendship be<br />

Concentered in this hour.<br />

True friendship's fires can not be<br />

quenched<br />

But in our hearts abide,<br />

And ripening with the years become<br />

Enriched and purified.<br />

Then gather 'round the campfire<br />

bright,<br />

Send up a starry shower,<br />

Old Father Time can ne'er efface<br />

The memories of this hour;<br />

And when dear friends are homeward<br />

bound<br />

Then I'll turn down the lamp,<br />

And in my slumbers live again<br />

The hours in the sugar camp.<br />

he will eat twice the amount of bulky<br />

food that he eats of the combined bulk<br />

of fats, starches, sugars and meats.<br />

As an example of a normal diet I will<br />

reproduce a single day's menu from<br />

Dr. W. D. Sansum's new book, "The<br />

Normal Diet," published by C. V.<br />

Mosby Company, St. Louis, Mo.<br />

BREAKFAST<br />

Grapefruit<br />

Shredded wheat with milk and sugar<br />

Scrambled eggs<br />

Toast and butter<br />

Coffee with cream and sugar<br />

DINNER<br />

Fresh fruit cocktail<br />

Chicken broth with rice<br />

Broiled chicken Mashed potatoes and gravy<br />

Buttered asparagus Celery hearts<br />

Small peas Olives<br />

Pineapple sundae and cake<br />

Coffee with sugar<br />

SUPPER<br />

Boiled rice<br />

String beans Baked tomato<br />

Tuna salad<br />

Hot biscuits and butter<br />

Apricot whip<br />

Milk<br />

The menu here given is one of many<br />

found in this book, but the one gives<br />

the reader an idea of what constitutes<br />

a normal diet. As regards the quantity<br />

allowed, I believe that one helping<br />

should be sufficient for the breakfast.<br />

Two scrambled eggs and two slices of<br />

toast, with the grapefruit, shredded<br />

wheat and the sugar and milk allowed<br />

with these and in the coffee, are sufficient<br />

food for ordinary needs. For<br />

the noon meal I believe the diner can<br />

with safety eat liberally of the celery<br />

hearts and olives, but a single helping<br />

(quite large) of the other items should<br />

prove sufficient. However, in the case<br />

of one who does heavy manual labor,<br />

a second helping of potatoes with<br />

gravy is permissible. For the evening<br />

meal a single helping ought to be<br />

enough. However, if the craving for<br />

additional food is very insistent a second<br />

helping of tomato and string<br />

beans will cause no harm. The total<br />

caloric value of the above menu is<br />

2,200.<br />

One Serving of Meat Enough<br />

As a general rule one may safely<br />

(and often with benefit) eat freely of<br />

the leafy and stalky vegetables, of<br />

string beans and of tomatoes. But a<br />

single liberal helping of meat or meat<br />

substitute and not more than two liberal<br />

helpings of potato are sufficient<br />

for all ordinary body needs.<br />

The diet reproduced above not only<br />

provides adequate quantities of carbohydrates,<br />

fats and proteins, but it also<br />

is rich in mineral salts and fruit<br />

juices. Vitamins, concerning which<br />

we shall hear more in a succeeding<br />

article, are also present in adequate<br />

quantities. And finally the diet is<br />

bulky enough to meet the needs of the<br />

intestinal canal.<br />

It may be important here to point<br />

out that a diet is not necessarily complete<br />

if it provides all the essential<br />

elements and food factors necessary<br />

for life and growth. If it does not<br />

also make for bulkiness it is not a<br />

normal diet. When we speak of bulk<br />

we mean the indigestible portion of<br />

the food, that part which passes in<br />

and out of the stomach and into and<br />

through the intestinal canal without<br />

being absorbed. For it is not possible<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S 27<br />

for the intestines, especially the colon,<br />

to function properly in the absence of<br />

something with which to function.<br />

The meats, eggs, all the starches,<br />

potatoes, sugars, refined white flours,<br />

milk and fats in our modern refined<br />

diets are mostly absorbed. They leave<br />

a very small residue which, blended<br />

with the bile from the liver and with<br />

the intestinal secretions and the bacteria<br />

that live in the intestines, forms<br />

a very small quantity of intestinal<br />

content. Because of the lack of bulkiness<br />

of this material the intestines do<br />

not fill up, and in consequence, there<br />

is retarded movement of the bowels.<br />

Since most of us have learned that<br />

normally the bowels should function<br />

daily, this lack of activity due to insufficient<br />

intestinal bulk causes many<br />

to take a cathartic and a dangerous<br />

and obnoxious habit is in the period of<br />

inception.<br />

On the other hand if a sufficient<br />

quantity of bulky food is consumed<br />

the intestines will fill and their excretory<br />

function will be normally stimulated.<br />

Vitamins in Many Bulky Foods<br />

Bulk in food is best supplied by the<br />

vegetables and woody roots. The<br />

brans and shorts of grains are also<br />

excellent sources of bulk. So to assure<br />

a sufficiently bulky food intake,<br />

one should eat freely of the green<br />

vegetables, the rooty tubers and of<br />

whole grains. Lettuce, celery, cabbage,<br />

spinach, turnips, beets, etc., all<br />

furnish bulk. And in addition to being<br />

bulky they also supply important mineral<br />

substances and vitamins.<br />

The fluid intake of the body is another<br />

important point to be considered<br />

along with the items that go to form<br />

a normal diet. There are a number<br />

of important roles played by the<br />

fluids we drink. First of all they aid<br />

in regulating the body temperature.<br />

The fluids act as carriers of the wastematerials<br />

cast off through the kidneys<br />

and from the intestinal canal. And<br />

finally, fluids act as solvents for many<br />

of the foods we eat.<br />

Whether or not fluids should be<br />

taken with the meals is still a disputed<br />

question. If the food is thoroughly<br />

masticated I can see no harm from<br />

the use of fluids with the food; that is,<br />

if the fluids are not too cold or too<br />

hot. And between meals one should<br />

form the habit of drinking liberally<br />

of water. But here a word of caution.<br />

By drinking liberally of water I do<br />

not mean to convey the impression<br />

that one should go on a water debauch.<br />

Returning to the man in the Hollywood<br />

restaurant who was committing<br />

a crime that morning mentioned in<br />

the opening paragraphs of this article.<br />

"You don't think much of his choice<br />

of food, I take it," remarked the gentleman<br />

opposite me.<br />

"No, I do not," I replied. "That<br />

chap's trying to commit suicide."<br />

"Why?" asked mv friend.<br />

"First of all," I began, "he's worrying<br />

a twenty-ounce steak. And<br />

twenty ounces of meat to start the<br />

day with is not the best for one whose<br />

chief occupation is sitting down."<br />

"How do you know his occupation is<br />

sedentary?" asked my friend.<br />

"His hands are soft and white," I<br />

pointed out. "They haven't a callous<br />

on them. And anyway he's too fat to<br />

move around very much."<br />

"But what's wrong with his breakfast?"<br />

queried my companion.<br />

The Wrong and Right Breakfast<br />

"In the first place, it is composed of<br />

diet items that are acid in their endash<br />

products," I pointed out. "Aside<br />

from the cream he is eating there isn't<br />

a morsel that will form alkaline ash.<br />

That's conductive to acidosis and eventually<br />

to kidney and arterial disease.<br />

In the second place, I estimate from<br />

the sugars, starches, fats and proteins<br />

he is eating that he is consuming<br />

about 1,400 calories of food. If he<br />

does that three times a day he will<br />

have consumed about 4,200 calories of<br />

food when he really only requires<br />

2,500. The other 1,700 calories are<br />

excess baggage and make for fat and<br />

overwork of his excretory organs."<br />

"What should he have eaten in place<br />

of that which he is now eating?" inquired<br />

my friend.<br />

"In the first place he should have<br />

allowed the steak to rest in the refrigerator<br />

until this evening and then he<br />

should have invited a friend in to<br />

share it with him. And in place of the<br />

steak, if he really felt the need of<br />

meat, he should have been satisfied<br />

with an egg, or a small portion of<br />

liver, or a few strips of crisp bacon.<br />

In the second place he should have<br />

chosen a menu that was either alkaline<br />

or one that contained enough of<br />

the alkaline foods to neutralize the<br />

acid foods he chose."<br />

"Suggest such a diet," invited my<br />

friend who was growing interested.<br />

"A half grapefruit to start with,"<br />

I said. "Then some whole wheat toast,<br />

the cereal he is eating with cream but<br />

less sugar than he covered it with,<br />

coffee, but no wheat cakes and syrup.<br />

An egg or two or its equivalent and a<br />

glass of orange juice to top it off with.<br />

That would have provided him with<br />

adequate fuel until luncheon, at which<br />

time he would have been normally<br />

hungry again. And in the meantime<br />

he would have felt more like doing<br />

something instead of feeling drowsy<br />

and listless as he will feel when he<br />

has finished this meal."<br />

"You said something about acidosis,<br />

what is that?" asked my companion.<br />

"That's another story and we'll discuss<br />

that some other time," I replied.<br />

Meanwhile the man at the other<br />

table was' ruthlessly committing a<br />

serious crime against himself by eating<br />

too much of the wrong kinds of<br />

food and none of those he should have<br />

eaten.<br />

(To be continued)<br />

(All rights reserved)<br />

March 10. When the <strong>Railway</strong> Clearing<br />

House Association was established<br />

in 1878 in Boston, Mr. Anthony became<br />

a clerk and he continued in that<br />

service for twelve years, being appointed<br />

Car Service Agent of the<br />

Boston & Albany in September, 1890.<br />

His title was subsequently changed to<br />

Superintendent of Car Service, and<br />

on Saturday he will have completed<br />

thirty-seven years and eight months<br />

of service in charge of the car service<br />

office.<br />

Chester W. Cummings, of West<br />

Newton, Mass., will succeed Mr. Anthony<br />

as Superintendent of Car Service<br />

with headquarters at Springfield.<br />

Mr. Cummings was born in Merrimac,<br />

Mass., June 13, 1886, and has<br />

been a clerk in the employ of the<br />

Boston & Albany Railroad since February<br />

of 1914. In February, 1919,<br />

he became chie* clerk to Vice-President<br />

H. M. Biscoe, and has served in<br />

that capacity since that date.<br />

C. O. Dales, of West Newton, Mass.,<br />

who has been in the employ of the<br />

Boston & Albany since 1908 in various<br />

clerical capacities and who has<br />

been secretary to Mr. Biscoe for ten<br />

years, succeeds Mr. Cummings as<br />

Chief Clerk at Boston & Albany headquarters,<br />

South Station, Boston.<br />

Mr. Anthony and S. H. Clark, who<br />

was retired at the same time from<br />

the Boston & Albany, were both<br />

guests of honor at a banquet in<br />

the Hotel Kimball of Springfield,<br />

April 30. At the conclusion, H. A.<br />

Noble, Division Freight Agent, who<br />

acted as toastmaster, presented them<br />

with a sizeable amount of gold which<br />

had been donated by the officers and<br />

employes of the Railroad.<br />

Speeches were made by Walter E.<br />

Adams, Special Assistant to Vice-<br />

President, representing the management;<br />

J. L. Truden, General Superintendent,<br />

representing the Operating<br />

Department, and Professor Arthur<br />

Rudman of the Springfield Y.M.C.A.<br />

College.<br />

A number of New York Central and<br />

officials from other railroads were<br />

present. Prominent Boston & Albany<br />

officials who were invited were:<br />

H. M. Biscoe, Vice-President; J. L.<br />

Truden, General Superintendent; R.<br />

Van Ummersen, Freight Traffic Manager<br />

; W. A. Barrows, General Passenger<br />

Agent; E. P. Gardiner, General<br />

Freight Agent; A. E. Allen, General<br />

Freight Agent.<br />

Rail Superintendents to Meet in<br />

Memphis<br />

AILROAD superintendents from<br />

M all parts of the United States,<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> and Mexico, with a few cities<br />

in South America also represented,<br />

L. A. Anthony, B. & A. Head of<br />

will be in Memphis, June 12-16, for<br />

the thirty-fifth annual convention of<br />

Car Service, is Retired the American Association of Railroad<br />

EWIS A. AN<strong>TH</strong>ONY, Superin­ Superintendents. Not less than 1,500<br />

L tendent of Car Service for the<br />

delegates and visitors will be in at­<br />

Boston & Albany, with headquarters<br />

tendance, the officers predict.<br />

at Springfield, Mass., was retired on<br />

Not only is Memphis the convention<br />

city but a Memphis man, J. M. Walsh,<br />

March 31 and his name was placed on<br />

Superintendent of the Memphis Divi­<br />

the pension rolls of the Company. The<br />

sion of the Illinois Central Railroad,<br />

official notice refers to his "fifty years is President.<br />

of faithful and efficient service." The third vice-president is F. M.<br />

Mr. Anthony, who was born in Scot­ Brown, Superintendent, Pittsburgh &<br />

land, reached the age of seventy on Lake Erie, Pittsburgh, Pa.


28<br />

<strong>TH</strong>AT freight stations might contribute<br />

their share of effort in<br />

the reduction of freight claim<br />

payments, an opportunity is offered<br />

employes in the freight house during<br />

the present loss and damage campaign<br />

to prove their interest in this great<br />

work. To assist them in the effort, I<br />

have the following suggestions to offer<br />

to receiving clerks, checkers, loaders,<br />

stowers and delivery clerks.<br />

Receiving Freight<br />

A careful receiving clerk is one<br />

who is particular to see that packages<br />

offered for forwarding are in good<br />

condition and that marks on freight<br />

conform with shipping instructions.<br />

He will indicate on shipping order<br />

each package received. He will see<br />

that old marks are removed or effaced.<br />

He will make identical endorsements<br />

on shipping order and bill<br />

of lading relating specifically to any<br />

alteration, addition or erasure, thereon<br />

sign agent's name, also his name<br />

and date below endorsement.<br />

He will see that information requisite<br />

on bill of lading and shipping order<br />

is legible.<br />

Before signing bill of lading he will<br />

determine that information upon bill<br />

of lading and shipping order is identical,<br />

indicating in detail the amount<br />

and character of freight received. A<br />

receiving clerk who has the interest<br />

of the Company at heart will be ever<br />

alert and watchful to see and know<br />

that all these features are protected.<br />

Checking Freight<br />

An interested checker is one who<br />

appreciates the importance of his position.<br />

He is the leader of the men<br />

assigned to him and the example he<br />

sets for his men will have a telling<br />

effect on the performance of the men.<br />

An interested checker will direct his<br />

men, advising the loader how best to<br />

place packages on trucks and truckers,<br />

how to push or pull the trucks to<br />

prevent damage to the freight by falling<br />

off trucks in moving to house or<br />

cars.<br />

He will watch marks on packages<br />

to see if they conform to name of consignee<br />

and destination as shown on<br />

the shipping order, tally slip and waybill.<br />

In a word, he will comply strictly<br />

with the rules covering the checking<br />

of freight, and the work will be<br />

well done.<br />

Loading Freight<br />

The loader, as a rule, breaks the<br />

seal, removes the hasp and slides the<br />

door to open. Sometimes it opens easily,<br />

at other times it is difficult to<br />

open. When trouble is experienced in<br />

opening a car door, there must be a<br />

reason for it, so the careful man will<br />

determine whether packages have fallen<br />

against it, and if so he will have<br />

the other door of car opened and entrance<br />

effected through that door, and<br />

packages removed. This will simplify<br />

the operation, time will be saved and<br />

By D. J. Sheehy<br />

Supervising Agent, Line East<br />

the possibility of damage to the<br />

freight resting against the door will<br />

be removed.<br />

The careful loader will not use a<br />

hook, bar or other instrument in releasing<br />

the packages loose in doorways<br />

or in car, but will use judgment<br />

by removing the cause, which is without<br />

doubt due to packages binding or<br />

overlapping one another. A careful<br />

loader will never pull over a heavy<br />

box, parcel or other package and allow<br />

it to strike heavily on edge, because<br />

he realizes that the impact will<br />

shatter it and cause, in many cases,<br />

damage to contents. A careful loader<br />

will use extreme care in placing packages<br />

on trucks so that they will not<br />

fall off when rolled to house or cars.<br />

Stowing Freight<br />

Stowing freight carefully in a car<br />

is essential if it is to arrive at destination<br />

in good condition, and much<br />

depends on how this stowing is supervised<br />

by the stevedore.<br />

As it is necessary for truckers to<br />

place freight in cars in the absence of<br />

the stevedores, the careful, interested<br />

stevedore will be on the alert to<br />

change any piece of freight left by a<br />

trucker that is not properly placed in<br />

car; only close supervision on the part<br />

of the stevedore will control this feature.<br />

Stevedores should caution truckers<br />

about handling freight roughly. They<br />

should endeavor to show the trucker<br />

the correct manner in which to remove<br />

freight from trucks and place<br />

it in the cars. The stevedore should<br />

never allow a piano to be stowed<br />

crosswise; lengthwise is the proper<br />

manner. Paper cartons and fibre<br />

packages should not be stowed on<br />

chime of barrels. If they are, or<br />

must be stowed on such, boards should<br />

be placed on the barrels, otherwise<br />

the chime will cut the packages.<br />

Ranges should be loaded on end<br />

instead of lying flat. Foodstuffs such<br />

as butter, eggs, cheese, lard, sugar,<br />

candy, crackers, etc., should not be<br />

loaded with freight that gives forth<br />

odor, such as fertilizer, creosoted shingles,<br />

onions, gasoline, etc. If these<br />

commodities are loaded near each<br />

other the foodstuffs will be contaminated<br />

by the odor.<br />

Light and heavy freight should not<br />

be stowed together, for if the light<br />

package freight is stowed with the<br />

heavy freight, it will sustain damage<br />

by being crushed. Freight of a fragile<br />

nature should be stowed by itself in<br />

the car, in so far as possible; tables,<br />

chairs, china closets, dressers, and in<br />

fact all furniture, should be stowed<br />

with legs resting on floor or on other<br />

freight if it is found necessary to tier<br />

it in the car. and then when the car<br />

is loaded and it is time to close the<br />

doors, care should be exercised to see<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

that packages are lowered to prevent<br />

falling over when the car is switched<br />

or is in train movement. If this last<br />

feature is not watched, damage will<br />

result regardless of how well the car<br />

is stowed.<br />

A car properly stowed and protected<br />

at time of closing will reach its<br />

destination in good order; on the other<br />

hand, if proper precautions are not<br />

taken, the freight will fall over and<br />

arrive at destination in damaged condition.<br />

Delivering Freight<br />

Extreme care is necessary in delivering<br />

freight. It must be delivered<br />

only upon presentation of freight bill,<br />

arrival notice, or written order approved<br />

by agent. When entire or partial<br />

delivery is made, name of consignee<br />

or authorized drayman, signature<br />

of person to whom delivery is<br />

made, license and dray number, date<br />

of delivery and signature of delivery<br />

clerk must be shown on delivery receipt.<br />

When exception is taken by consignee<br />

or his authorized drayman at<br />

time of delivery, delivery clerk must<br />

make a close inspection, examining<br />

carefully the package and its contents<br />

to determine loss or damage. A good<br />

delivery clerk will be thoroughly conversant<br />

with these features and will<br />

follow the rules governing the delivery<br />

of freight.<br />

Trucking Freight<br />

Much depends on the manner in<br />

which the trucker goes about his<br />

work. Freight is moved over platforms<br />

and through cars to assigned<br />

places and it is the trucker's duty to<br />

do this. A careful trucker will know<br />

before he moves packages on his truck<br />

that they are securely placed to prevent<br />

falling off, and he will see that<br />

the freight is delivered to the proper<br />

car or spot in house.<br />

In removing packages from the<br />

truck he will use care. He will be<br />

particular to stow it at either point<br />

in the best possible manner to prevent<br />

damage to freight. (The trucker<br />

working with but one thought in mind<br />

and that to render his Company faithful<br />

service, can and will do his work<br />

well.)<br />

A careful trucker will use judgment<br />

in moving his truck, pushing it with<br />

packages that are of a fragile nature<br />

so that he can observe how such packages<br />

ride, and in the event they become<br />

dislodged, he can prevent them<br />

from falling from truck. He will<br />

never rush about carelessly, striking<br />

other freight in cars and in the section<br />

with his truck, which would cause<br />

that freight to fall and become damaged.<br />

If all employes engaged in this class<br />

of work at our freight stations will<br />

give whole-hearted co-operation we<br />

feel confident they will make a mark<br />

for themselves which will be recorded<br />

high up on the roll of endeavor to<br />

eliminate freight claim payment.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 29<br />

T w o Judges Address Metropolitan Veterans<br />

npHE music was as good as the din-<br />

-- ner; the dinner was on par with<br />

the entertainment, and the whole affair<br />

was worthy of the usual high<br />

standard of annual banquets given<br />

by the Metropolitan Chapter of the<br />

New York Central Veterans' Association.<br />

Approximately a thousand<br />

members and guests attended in the<br />

grand ballroom of the Hotel Commodore,<br />

April 12.<br />

It was a reunion time for many of<br />

the veterans who had lost touch with<br />

one another during the months; it was<br />

also an opportunity for making new<br />

acquaintances, and as President Crowley<br />

expressed it, the banquet was a<br />

"reunion of a goodly part of the New<br />

York Central family."<br />

Following a brief business meeting<br />

at which the officers selected by the<br />

nominating committee were unanimously<br />

elected, J. M. Wooldridge,<br />

President of the Chapter, presented<br />

Mr. Crowley, who gave a few words<br />

of welcome.<br />

"They told me I was to have five<br />

minutes to speak to you," said Mr.<br />

Crowley, "so I think I will take my<br />

time out dancing.<br />

"Someone suggested that I loan one<br />

of the veterans, James Hustis, part of<br />

my five minutes, to tell one of his<br />

stories, but when I recall some of his<br />

stories, and how long it takes to find<br />

the point, five minutes would never do.<br />

"I am very glad indeed to be here<br />

tonight. It is always a joy and pleasure<br />

for me to meet with my fellow<br />

workers of the New York Central<br />

Lines. We have a wonderful family.<br />

We have a wonderful railroad, and I<br />

want to take this opportunity of<br />

thanking all of you for the loyal and<br />

hearty support you have given me in<br />

the years that have gone, and wish for<br />

you and those that are dear to you, a<br />

very bright, happy and prosperous<br />

year."<br />

One veteran was missing, to whom<br />

A. S. Lyman, General Attorney of<br />

the New York Central, referred as<br />

the "greatest veteran of them all."<br />

Speaking first of the Association,<br />

then of Chauncey M. Depew, Mr.<br />

Lyman said:<br />

< "I think that as these recurring anniversaries<br />

come around, the faces<br />

that are gathered here we learn to<br />

group together as old friends that we<br />

have seen here before, in this same<br />

pleasant family association. One has<br />

a gratifying realization that the veteran<br />

idea is rooted a little deeper<br />

every year, and the tree which was<br />

first planted on a very cold January<br />

day in the Lexington Avenue Opera<br />

House has flourished, and has such a<br />

hold upon the affections of New York<br />

Central men and women that we can<br />

feel that the tree is here to stay. We<br />

do not have to think of special fertilizers<br />

or guy ropes to hold it up. It<br />

is standing up and growing, and it is<br />

a real institution of the New York<br />

Central Railroad—I am not going to<br />

say Company, I am going to say Lines,<br />

at Banquet in N e w Y o r k City<br />

•rbk wff. vn^es* fume,<br />

mese ia«€ "epwcs'/<br />

Xm Uohnson<br />

The way things were done at the Metropolitan Veterans' banquet.<br />

because I think the idea is broadening<br />

out, and the day not so distant when<br />

there will be one fold, just as now we<br />

have one shepherd.<br />

"In this great railroad enterprise<br />

we each have our little narrow specialty,<br />

but here we get in touch with<br />

the broad endeavors of a great railroad<br />

company in its multitudinous activities,<br />

and it is pleasant to meet occasionally<br />

all the people, or some of<br />

them in all the departments of the<br />

company, all engaged in a great common<br />

enterprise, which we all know to<br />

be an enormous public benefaction.<br />

"As I think of the qualities of a<br />

good Veteran, I am reminded of the<br />

passing of an eminent man, who has<br />

been for so many years identified with<br />

the New York Central Railroad Company.<br />

He belonged to a former gen­<br />

eration and his activities were manifested<br />

at their climax in the time of a<br />

generation that has passed. In that<br />

tremendously long span of life, he<br />

preserved his body, preserved his happy<br />

outlook upon life, his invariable<br />

cheerfulness, his kindness and his loyalty<br />

to his company. I think among<br />

men these were the qualities for which<br />

he was always extolled, and much<br />

stress has been put upon them, but<br />

Chauncey M. Depew was married to<br />

one railroad practically from its inception,<br />

and continued an undivided<br />

devotion to the magnificent organization,<br />

which he left a few days ago.<br />

He was first, last and all the time a<br />

New York Central man, holding an<br />

exalted place in the organization, but<br />

he had a friendly fraternal regard for<br />

each and every man in it. He, so to


_^terans_ofJ^et|^ York City, renewed friendships at their sixth annual banquet In the Hotel Commodore, April 12. Justice Bleakley was the principal speaker. *


'ork Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

speak, felt the great organization as<br />

a part of himself, just as an experienced<br />

locomotive engineer feels his<br />

machine. He cannot tell you why, but<br />

he knows what every part of that<br />

machine is doing or failing to do, by<br />

a sort of instinct. And so, Mr. Depew's<br />

personality was extended out<br />

until in a sense he touched every<br />

phase, every branch of this vast property,<br />

of this vast organization, and<br />

was the personal friend of every New<br />

York Central man, and of every friend<br />

of the New York Central Lines. He<br />

was supported through a long and intensely<br />

active life by his outstanding<br />

magnificent qualities of friendship, of<br />

kindness, of hopefulness and of loyalty.<br />

"As a tribute to the memory of the<br />

first and greatest Veteran we have<br />

had, I ask you all to stand with me<br />

for a moment in silence."<br />

An impromptu address on transportation<br />

was made by Supreme Court<br />

Justice A. H. F. Seeger. According<br />

to Judge Seeger, the advance in methods<br />

of transportation is one of the<br />

phenomena of American progress,<br />

and in a large measure is responsible<br />

for American expansion. He recalled<br />

the development of cities along the<br />

New York Central Lines and the<br />

abandonment of other towns that were<br />

inaccessible to the Railroad.<br />

"It is said that Rome fell because<br />

of the imperfection of a horse-collar.<br />

If Rome bad bad the New York Central<br />

Lines, she might still be the mistress<br />

of the world," declared Judge<br />

Seeger.<br />

The Hon. William F. Bleakley, Justice<br />

of the Supreme Court, was the<br />

principal speaker of the evening. Justice<br />

Bleakley was formerly counsel for<br />

the New York Central in Westchester<br />

County, a fact he mentioned in appreciation<br />

for the loyalty and support he<br />

said had born given him by his friends<br />

of the Railroad.<br />

After a barrage of witticisms,<br />

Judge Bleakley introduced a discussion<br />

of the treatment of crime, especially<br />

in Westchester County. From<br />

the days of gross inhumanity, prison<br />

reform movements have ameliorated<br />

the condition of convicts until today<br />

they are "pampered and mollycoddled<br />

with better living conditions than<br />

have many honest working men outside<br />

of the jails," he said.<br />

"Today the public is the underdog.<br />

The odds are with the crook from the<br />

commission of the crime until he is<br />

behind the bars. He has first to be<br />

detected, and then on through the trial<br />

he has constant loopholes by which<br />

he may escape.<br />

"First offenders should be made to<br />

realize the seriousness of their charge,<br />

just as old offenders, for with first<br />

offenders the fear of punishment is<br />

not a deterrent in the commission of<br />

crime. I know that you will be interested<br />

to know that through careful<br />

and judicious handling of their cases,<br />

90 per cent of the first offenders in<br />

Westchester County make good.<br />

"Young offenders are becoming<br />

more prevalent, and sex crimes are<br />

more of a problem. Many offenders<br />

are boys from the privileged class<br />

rather than from the others. Parents<br />

come to me with the statement that<br />

(Concluded on page 106)<br />

\ i .. York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 31<br />

IJMEEIC'DEPARTMENTil<br />

National Parks Ready for Summer Season<br />

Ranler National Park, in the State of Washington, offers twenty-eight glaciers to<br />

the sight-seeing tourist, winter sports amid its snow fields in summer, and verdure<br />

In its surrounding valleys in winter time. Paradise Inn, one of its two principal<br />

hotels, Is situated between the Paradise River, which flows down the floor of the<br />

valley below, and the Nisqually Glacier on the mountain side above.<br />

^SA7HILE the railroads of the country<br />

are preparing for heavy<br />

summer travel, the national parks of<br />

the United States, to which many<br />

thousands of tourists from home and<br />

abroad will journey during the coming<br />

season, have made ready to receive<br />

vast throngs of visitors in utmost comfort.<br />

The American public has developed<br />

an amazing "national park consciousness"<br />

the last few years, an intense<br />

interest in the nation's pleasure re­<br />

sources which has made the national<br />

parks and monuments the goal of increasing<br />

numbers of vacationists.<br />

Whether one seeks canyon or gorge;<br />

geyser or glacier; lakes, falls, rivers<br />

or roaring torrents; big trees or dense<br />

forests; towering peaks or fertile valleys,<br />

or mystifying and revered relics<br />

of past races in this country, amid<br />

surroundings of scenic splendor these<br />

wonders may all be found in national<br />

parks.<br />

New York Central Lines routes<br />

with their connections are greatly fa­<br />

vored pathways, giving the traveler<br />

not only the joys of his destination,<br />

but the comforts and scenic treats of<br />

the New York Central route as well.<br />

The seasons of the national parks<br />

and monuments (the latter are<br />

starred) are given here:<br />

PARK OR<br />

MONUMENT STATE SEASON<br />

Bryce Canyon,* Utah June 1-Oct. 5<br />

Crater Lake, Oregon July 1-Sept. 30<br />

General Grant, California May 24-Oct. 10<br />

Grand Cayon (via Williams, Arizona)<br />

Arizona Open all year<br />

Grand Canyon (via Cedar City, Utah)<br />

Arizona May 15-Oct. 5<br />

Hot Springs, Arkansas Open all year<br />

Kaibab Forest, Arizona June 1-Oct. 5<br />

Lassen Volcanic, California June 15-Sept. 1<br />

Mesa Verde, Colorado May 15-Oct. 20<br />

Mount Baker, Washington . . June 15-Sept. 15<br />

Mount Rainier, Washington .. June 15-Sept. 15<br />

Petrified Forest.* Arizona Open all year<br />

Pipe Springs,* Arizona June 1-Oct. 5<br />

Rocky Mountain-Estes Peak, Colorado,<br />

June 15-Oct. 31<br />

San Isabel Forest. Colorado. June 15-Sept. 30<br />

Sequoia, California May 24-Oct. 10<br />

Wind Cave, South Dakota June 1-Sept. 30<br />

Yellowstone. Wyoming June 20-Sept. 15<br />

Yosemite, California June 20-Sept. 15<br />

Zion, Utah , June 1-Oct. 5<br />

CANADIAN PARKS<br />

Banff May 15-Sept. 30<br />

Field June 15-Sept. 15<br />

Glacier June 15-Sept. 15<br />

Lake Windermere June 15-Sept. 15<br />

Jasper June i-Sept. 30<br />

Lake Louise June 1-Sept. 30<br />

TERRITORIAL PARKS<br />

Mt. McKinley National Park. Alaska.<br />

June 1-Sept. 30<br />

Hawaii National Park, Hawaiian Islands,<br />

Open all year<br />

Mexican Mountain Journey is<br />

Described in Folder<br />

^/n<strong>TH</strong>E World's Most Amazing <strong>Railway</strong><br />

Trip" is the ambitious title<br />

under which the Mexican <strong>Railway</strong> has<br />

brought out a handsome new folder,<br />

which gives an account of the journey<br />

from Vera Cruz to Mexico City with<br />

illustrations of the marvelous scenery<br />

on this line.<br />

The Mexican <strong>Railway</strong> is standard<br />

or broad gauge all the way and on the<br />

mountain section, where the track is<br />

carried up < 5,000 feet in forty-two<br />

miles, the line is electrified. The trip<br />

over these mountains in Mexico, an<br />

extension of our Sierra Madre range,<br />

is swift and smooth, and the Mexican<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> covers their most beautiful<br />

tropic sections in the transit of 264<br />

miles from the sea at Vera Cruz to<br />

Mexico City.<br />

Copies of the new folder describing<br />

the journey, may be obtained by addressing<br />

W. F. Paton, General Agent,<br />

Mexican <strong>Railway</strong> Company, 82 Beaver<br />

Street, New York City, or 648 Marquette<br />

Building, Chicago, 111.<br />

Heavy Steel Freight Cars Put<br />

Into B. & A. Service<br />

A T a cost of $82,000, the Boston &<br />

Albany have put into service<br />

fourteen new steel freight cars, especially<br />

designed for hauling heavy<br />

concentrated loads.<br />

Five of these cars are of the drop-


32 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

frame type, built for shipping electrical<br />

transformers. Because transformers<br />

must be loaded on cars in a<br />

vertical position and are nearly thirteen<br />

feet in length, ordinary freight<br />

cars would not permit enough clearance<br />

of bridges. The new cars are<br />

built closer to the tracks with the central<br />

portion between the tracks depressed<br />

to within about two feet of<br />

Ohio State Limited and the Hudson<br />

River Limited, Nos. 15 and 2nd 26,<br />

will have observation lounge sleeping<br />

cars, each having three compartments<br />

and two drawing rooms, between New<br />

York and Cincinnati.<br />

The Adirondack and Montreal Express,<br />

No. 55, will make its first trip<br />

of the season May 25. On that date<br />

Adirondack equipment now moving in<br />

2nd No. 21, the Toronto Limited, will<br />

be transferred to No. 55.<br />

No. 16 will henceforth be known as<br />

"The Prairie State Express" and will<br />

constitute a twenty-four-hour service<br />

from Chicago to New York, also of<br />

special utility as an afternoon train,<br />

Chicago to Cleveland. It will make<br />

stops at important intermediate<br />

points, Chicago to Cleveland. No.<br />

609 will provide return fast afternoon<br />

service, Cleveland to Chicago,<br />

and will also be known as "The Prairie<br />

State."<br />

No. 16 will carry Pullman cars only<br />

East of Buffalo, including Chicago-<br />

New York non-excess fare sleepers<br />

from New York Central and Michigan<br />

Central No. 10. No. 16 will have a<br />

parlor car, Syracuse to New York.<br />

* * *<br />

The Iroquois, No. 59, will have a<br />

New York-Detroit sleeper which will<br />

move from Buffalo in Michigan Central<br />

No. 15. The car now moving in<br />

No. 63 will be discontinued.<br />

New York Central No. 10, formerly<br />

the New York and New England Ex<br />

press, will hereafter be known as "The<br />

Easterner."<br />

* * *<br />

No. 407, Mohawk Valley passenger<br />

service, will carry Boston-Utica sleeper<br />

from Boston & Albany No. 43 at<br />

Albany.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central No. 24 will have<br />

Utica-Boston sleeper instead of Syracuse-Boston<br />

car heretofore operated.<br />

New York Central No. 30, The Niagara,<br />

will carry Rochester-Albany<br />

and Rochester-Boston sleepers now<br />

operating in No. 46, Boston Express,<br />

out of Rochester.<br />

* * *<br />

The Mount Royal via Rutland from<br />

Montreal to New York will be numbered<br />

72 instead of 2nd No. 62.<br />

* * *<br />

Buffalo and New York Express,<br />

r r *<br />

the top of the track. One of these<br />

cars weighs 68,400 pounds and has a<br />

carrying capacity of 182,600 pounds.<br />

The other nine cars are all-steel<br />

flat cars with the floor little more<br />

than three feet off the rails. These<br />

cars have a carrying capacity of<br />

205,000 pounds. The trucks have cast<br />

steel side frames and axles with six<br />

and one-half-inch by twelve-inch<br />

journals.<br />

Changes f o r D a y l i g h t S a v i n g Season<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E following are the more important equipment changes contained<br />

in Passenger Department official announcement effective with time<br />

change, April 29, unless otherwise noted.<br />

No. 34, will carry Lockport-New York<br />

sleeper heretofore mov^g in No. 30.<br />

* * *<br />

The Onondaga, New York Central<br />

No. 142, will have coaches and diner,<br />

Buffalo to New York, and parlor cars,<br />

Rochester and Albany to New York.<br />

* * *<br />

Sunday-only train, New York Central<br />

No. 198, will operate April 29 to<br />

September 23, inclusive, Albany to<br />

New York, with parlor car and<br />

coaches. * * *<br />

No. 313, Rochester to Buffalo morning<br />

accommodation, will have parlor<br />

car, Rochester to Buffalo.<br />

HE New York Central Lines an­<br />

Tnounced, April 20, the placing of<br />

orders amongst the largest car manufacturing<br />

companies in the country,<br />

for over $2,500,000 new steel passenger<br />

equipment for delivery this year.<br />

The number of new cars ordered totals<br />

120 of various types.<br />

The passenger cars ordered will be<br />

the latest and most luxurious in coach<br />

equipment.<br />

The orders placed with the manufacturers<br />

call for nineteen all-steel<br />

passenger coaches; six all-steel diners;<br />

ten all-steel multiple unit suburban<br />

coaches; three all-steel combination<br />

coaches; thirty all-steel baggage<br />

cars; three all-steel combination baggage<br />

and mail cars; nineteen all-steel<br />

horse cars and thirty all-steel underframe<br />

milk cars. These cars after<br />

Boston and Buffalo Special, No. 49,<br />

will have dining car, Syracuse to Buffalo.<br />

* * *<br />

The Intercity Express, No. 335, will<br />

have broiler buffet parlor car, Albany<br />

to Buffalo.<br />

New York Central No. 44, New<br />

New York Express, will have diner,<br />

Albany to New York.<br />

* * *<br />

The DeWitt Clinton, New York<br />

Central No. 56, will have diner, Erie<br />

to Albany.<br />

* * *<br />

Toledo-Buffalo parlor car in No. 52,<br />

Chicago - Buffalo Express, will be<br />

shortened to run Toledo to Cleveland,<br />

only.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central No. 28, Buffalo<br />

Express, will be discontinued east of<br />

Cleveland, coach passengers transferring<br />

to No. 56 or 128 at that point.<br />

Eugene Shannon<br />

OLLOWING a month's illness, Eu­<br />

F gene Patrick Shannon, sixty-five,<br />

died at his home in Malone, April 3.<br />

Since 1893 Mr. Shannon had been<br />

connected with the Adirondack Division<br />

in various capacities. His last<br />

position was as a car repairer at Malone.<br />

A son, Gerald B. Shannon, who<br />

survives him, is assistant foreman in<br />

the Car Department there.<br />

A carload of Neely hardware for the Democratic National Convention Hall in<br />

Houston, Texas, being transported by the New York Central Lines.<br />

O v e r T w o a n d a H a l f M i l l i o n D o l l a r s Steel<br />

Passenger E q u i p m e n t O r d e r e d<br />

being built will be assigned and delivered<br />

as follows: Seventy-five cars<br />

to the New York Central Railroad;<br />

five cars to the Pittsburgh & Lake<br />

Erie Railroad; thirteen cars to the<br />

Boston & Albany Railroad; twenty<br />

cars to the C. C. C. & St. L. <strong>Railway</strong><br />

(Big Four Route) ; four cars to the<br />

Peoria & Eastern Railroad and three<br />

cars to the Rutland Railroad.<br />

The orders were divided among the<br />

manufacturing concerns as follows:<br />

Twenty-five cars to be built by the<br />

Pullman Car & Manufacturing Company;<br />

thirty-four cars by the American<br />

Car & Foundry Company; ten<br />

cars by the Standard Steel Car Company;<br />

sixteen cars by the Osgood-<br />

Bradley Car Company; five cars by<br />

the Pressed Steel Car Company, and<br />

thirty cars by the Merchants Despatch,<br />

Inc.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 33<br />

Stops Train Two Feet From<br />

Child on Tracks<br />

A TTRACTED by the cries of the<br />

mother, Engineman T. Sheehan<br />

applied emergency air brakes in time<br />

to save the life of a two-year-old child<br />

that wandered in front of his locomotive<br />

at Terre Haute, Ind., February 7.<br />

The locomotive stopped within two<br />

feet of the child, who could not be<br />

seen from the cab either by Mr. Sheehan<br />

or his fireman and conductor who<br />

were present. The mother had seemed<br />

too frightened to rescue the child and<br />

while in an hysterical condition was<br />

taken by members of the train crew<br />

to a physician.<br />

P. L. McManus, General Superintendent<br />

of the Evansville, Indianapolis<br />

& Terre Haute <strong>Railway</strong>, commended<br />

Mr. Sheehan for his promptness.<br />

Traffic Notes of the Month<br />

New York Central train No. 151, the Interstate<br />

Express, will be held not to exceed fifteen<br />

minutes in Buffalo when passengers are reported<br />

on No. 33 as desiring to connect with<br />

No. 151.<br />

Effective April 1, Ohio Central Lines coach<br />

service was reorganized as follows:<br />

No. 4, Toledo to Charleston, instead of Detroit<br />

to Charleston.<br />

No. 6, Toledo to Columbus, instead of Detroit<br />

to Columbus.<br />

No. 8, Toledo to Columbus, instead of Detroit<br />

to Columbus.<br />

No. 3, Columbus to Toledo, instead of to<br />

Detroit.<br />

No. 7. Columbus to Toledo, instead of to<br />

Detroit.<br />

Now that the baseball season has started and<br />

the "Kingdom of Swat" once more has come<br />

into its own, patrons on New York Central<br />

Lines de luxe trains are receiving scores of big<br />

league games while en route. Scores are posted<br />

along with other important news of the day in<br />

the club cars.<br />

Notes of Other Lines<br />

The Denver & Rio Grande Western<br />

announces a shortened schedule for<br />

the Panoramic Special, which inaugurates<br />

its 1928 season with a westbound<br />

trip from Denver June 17 and<br />

castbound out of Salt Lake City June<br />

18. Final trips leave Denver September<br />

8 and Salt Lake City September<br />

9. The Panoramic is the famous daylight<br />

train operating via the Royal<br />

' Gorge. .<br />

The Hudson River Navigation Company,<br />

operating night steamers between<br />

New York, Albany and Troy,<br />

commenced its season on April 1.<br />

Hudson River Day Line boats make<br />

their first through trips May 18.<br />

Canadian National summer service<br />

includes the Confederation, fast limited<br />

service between Toronto and<br />

Vancouver with the first trip from<br />

Toronto May 19 and from Vancouver<br />

May 21. The last trip leaves Vancouver<br />

September 29 and Toronto<br />

September 28.<br />

The Yale-Princeton-Cornell Triangular<br />

Regatta will be held on the<br />

Housatonic River, Saturday, May 19.<br />

The New Haven line is arranging special<br />

observation cars along the course<br />

and special service from New York.<br />

The Soo-Pacific Express of the<br />

Canadian Pacific operates on its summer<br />

schedule for 1928 from June 28<br />

to August 30 from Chicago, and from<br />

July 2 to September 3 from Van-<br />

Tours A r r a n g e d T h r o u g h M o u n t a i n , Glacier,<br />

L a k e a n d R i v e r Districts o f A l a s k a<br />

Winter & Pond Photo<br />

One hundred miles back in the mountains is the source of Mendenhall Glacier, the<br />

mouth of which, near Juneau, Alaska, can be visited while one's boat is in dock.<br />

From beneath its jagged, green-blue ice a foaming torrent rushes to the sea. Mendenhall<br />

is no longer active, and as it recedes year by year, shrubs and trees grow<br />

where formerly there was only ice.<br />

OT many years ago great hosts<br />

of people were making their way<br />

toward Alaska, the new Eldorado,<br />

from whence had come the magic cry<br />

of "gold" that was heard round the<br />

world. Schooners of every variety<br />

were pressed into service, and all hurried<br />

northward with their cargoes of<br />

eager and anxious humanity.<br />

Great obstacles had to be overcome<br />

by those sturdy, early-day adventurers,<br />

in their quest for wealth.<br />

Today thousands more feel the<br />

"Call of the North" each year, although<br />

now it is not the desire for<br />

gold that takes them there. It is a<br />

wish actually to see "America's Last<br />

Frontier" that prompts them to travel<br />

northward.<br />

There was a time when travel to and<br />

throughout Alaska involved considerable<br />

time and much hardship. Conditions<br />

have changed, however, and<br />

commodious steamships now provide<br />

year-round service between Alaska<br />

and the States. The "Inside Passage"<br />

route to Alaska is a puzzling<br />

waterway which winds among myriad<br />

mountainous islands. The great<br />

peaks that rise from the ocean's edge<br />

and the glaciers which, with a warning<br />

note like thunder, send their icebergs<br />

off into the sea, make the water<br />

trip alone worth while. But the interior<br />

of Alaska offers still more<br />

wonders. There one can view more<br />

mighty mountain slopes and vast glaciers,<br />

and find growing close beside<br />

them the most gorgeous flowers, the<br />

most luscious fruits, of any region in<br />

the world. One can find forests of<br />

impenetrable tropic denseness; see<br />

broad lakes reflecting snow-capped<br />

summits; watch the sunrise meet the<br />

sunset in the summertime; see Aurora<br />

Borealis in the land of its nativity;<br />

follow turbulent streams and see and<br />

hear and feel their wildly tumbling<br />

cascades.<br />

Well-defined routes enable the traveler<br />

to make a choice of tours<br />

throughout the interior, which embraces<br />

almost 600,000 square miles<br />

of territory.<br />

Three great tours are offered to<br />

inland Alaska by the Alaska Railroad<br />

and other interests. All may be taken<br />

whether the tourist arrives by steamer<br />

from Seattle, Vancouver or Prince<br />

Rupert. These trips are "Alaska's<br />

Great Circle Tour" via the Alaska<br />

Railroad, Yukon River, the White<br />

Horse & Yukon <strong>Railway</strong>; "Alaska's<br />

Golden Belt Tour" by steamship, rail<br />

and motor, and the "Lower Yukon<br />

River Cruises."<br />

Mount McKinley, in Mount McKinley<br />

National park, is the mecca of<br />

tourists. This monarch of all mountain<br />

peaks is 20,300 feet high, and it^<br />

neighbors, Mounts Russell and Foraker,<br />

are 11,600 and 17,000 feet in elevation.<br />

Mt. McKinley is the second<br />

largest and farthest north of America's<br />

national parks.<br />

Other principal places included in<br />

the tours are Seward, Skagway, Lynn<br />

Canal, Bartlett Glacier, Dawson City,<br />

Lake Atlin and the Atlin Mountains,<br />

Five Finger Rapids on the Yukon,<br />

the Loop District, Keystone Canyon<br />

Waterfalls, Richardson Highway,<br />

Childs Glacier and Iron Trail Bridge,<br />

Chugach Mountains, Abercrombie<br />

Canyon, Petersburg, Nenana, Spencer<br />

Glacier, Turnagain Arm, Curry<br />

Hotel, Kenai Lake, Resurrection Bay,<br />

Ketchikan, Tanana, and Healy.<br />

A comprehensive booklet on Alaska<br />

and its many intriguing marvels has<br />

been issued by the Alaska Railroad.<br />

It may be obtained from New York<br />

Central Railroad representatives, from<br />

the Alaska Railroad, 6111 Interior<br />

Building, Washington, D. C, or from<br />

the White Horse & Yukon <strong>Railway</strong>,<br />

2049 Straus Building, Chicago, and<br />

Alaska Building, Seattle.


34<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

One of the thousands of new Dodge motor cars which have been shipped this year from the factory in Detroit over the New<br />

York Central Lines, standing beside No. 5239. one of the powerful new Hudson type locomotives.<br />

H o u r C l i p p e d f r o m<br />

S part of the policy of improving<br />

still further its New York-Chicago<br />

train service, the New York Central<br />

Railroad made, effective April 29,<br />

a cut in the running time of two of its<br />

best known limited express trains, the<br />

Wolverine and the Fifth Avenue Special.<br />

The Wolverine, which heretofore<br />

has made the trip in twenty-one hours<br />

and fifty minutes, will make the trip<br />

in twenty hours and fifty minutes, or<br />

one hour less, leaving New York at<br />

5:10 P.M. and arriving in Chicago at<br />

1:10 P.M. the following day. This<br />

enables connections with the sixtyeight-hour<br />

trains to the West to be<br />

made.<br />

The Fifth Avenue Special will leave<br />

Chicago at 10:30 A.M., as heretofore,<br />

but will arrive in New York at 8:30<br />

A.M. instead of 9:21. These cuts in<br />

time make these trains equal the time<br />

of the North Shore Limited, a new<br />

train instituted last June, which also<br />

makes the run between New York and<br />

Chicago in twenty hours and fifty<br />

minutes.<br />

President's Care, Like That of<br />

Employes, Brings Praise<br />

TPHE courtesy of which the New<br />

York Central boasts "from the<br />

President down" and its effects are<br />

well exemplified through a letter to<br />

President Crowley from Miss Lillian<br />

Bostock who, after lodging a complaint<br />

against the Railroad a year<br />

ago, now turns to compliment the line<br />

on its good service. She writes:<br />

"A little over a year ago I wrote to<br />

you complaining about the lateness of<br />

arrival of the particular train I come<br />

to New York on each day over the<br />

Harlem Division, and received a very<br />

courteous reply from you, and later, a<br />

telephone message from your secretary.<br />

"It occurred to me that it might<br />

intrigue you to receive a commendatory<br />

letter, and this one is to tell you<br />

T r i p o n T w o Trains<br />

e w Y o r k 0 C h i c a g o<br />

that during the holiday season just<br />

past I was able to arrive at our offices<br />

usually on time. Further, that there<br />

seems to be a general impression that<br />

the Harlem Division is the best suburban<br />

line out of New York, and<br />

within a year our manager has purchased<br />

a home at Scarsdale and a<br />

member of our firm, Mr. Deans, is<br />

taking a summer residence at Bedford<br />

Hills.<br />

"Now the immediate inspiration<br />

for this note is a little family episode.<br />

My side-partner, Miss Mary E.<br />

Knowlton, a senior teacher in Morris<br />

High School, lost her purse on a train<br />

arriving at Tuckahoe in the late afternoon<br />

one day last week and did not<br />

discover the loss until she reached our<br />

bank to deposit her salary check for<br />

some $347. Then the president of the<br />

bank took the matter in hand and<br />

stopped payment on the check for her<br />

and sent her to your agent at Tuckahoe<br />

to have him try to trace the purse.<br />

"Your station agent kept the wires<br />

hot to White Plains, but up to nine<br />

o'clock that night nothing had been<br />

heard of the prodigal, but later that<br />

evening your agent took the trouble<br />

to telephone us that it had been found<br />

and turned in and would be sent to<br />

his station where Miss Knowlton recovered<br />

it the following day.<br />

"I am sure it will be gratifying to<br />

you to know something of the honesty<br />

of your employes, and I only regret<br />

that the very small check we sent to<br />

Mr. Smith could not have been for a<br />

larger amount."<br />

T o e o f Freight M o v e d O n e M i l e f o r a C e n t<br />

J\ MERICAN railroads do a bigger drop in revenue than in traffic lies in<br />

transportation job at cheaper<br />

t h e<br />

declining price of transportation<br />

rates than any other country in the Iv "27' that ' S<br />

' W h a t t h e<br />

f P^lic P a<br />

-V d<br />

,<br />

w o r l d<br />

-<br />

The railroads last year received an<br />

average of 1.080 cents for moving a<br />

ton of freight one mile. This represents<br />

a decrease of 15.3 per cent as<br />

compared with receipts in 1921.<br />

For transporting a passenger one<br />

the railways per transportation unit.<br />

In both the freight and the passenger<br />

service, average receipts per unit were<br />

lower in 1927 than in any previous<br />

y e a<br />

m c e<br />

,L,? 1920.<br />

T h e<br />

, average receipts per ton-mile<br />

and passenger-mile, year by year from<br />

} 92<br />

} t o 19<br />

2, 7<br />

» a r e<br />

mile, the railroads received last year<br />

presented m the fol-<br />

'owing table. These averages measan<br />

average of 2.896 cents, a decrease<br />

of 6.2 per cent as compared with 1921.<br />

These decreases are the result of<br />

r e W a<br />

" degree of accuracy<br />

t h e<br />

respective price levels of the two<br />

principal kinds of transportation servinnumerable<br />

individual rate readjustl<br />

c e<br />

rendered by the railways."<br />

ments which have been going on<br />

throughout the country in the last few<br />

Receipts per Ton-Mile and Passenger-<br />

Mile, 1921-1927<br />

years. .... . Receipts per Receipts pe-<br />

In an analysis of this Situation, JUSt<br />

issued, the Bureau of <strong>Railway</strong> Economics<br />

says:<br />

"In the freight and passenger services,<br />

the decrease in revenue in 1927<br />

was relatively greater than the actual<br />

decline in traffic. Respecting the<br />

other services, known factors do not<br />

exist by which to measure the physical<br />

amount of the service rendered.<br />

"The explanation for the greater<br />

ton-mile<br />

(cents)<br />

1921 1.275<br />

*323 \'\H<br />

1924 i!ii6<br />

1925 1.097<br />

9 2 6 1 0 8 1<br />

\<br />

1 0 8 0<br />

•<br />

p e r e e n t deccease:<br />

1927<br />

under 1926 01<br />

1927 under 1921". 15.3<br />

passenger-mil:<br />

(centsi<br />

3.086<br />

inVg<br />

2^978<br />

2.938<br />

2<br />

«6<br />

2 , 8 9 6<br />

14<br />

6.2<br />

York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 35<br />

New Freight House Opens at<br />

North Tonawanda<br />

'II'MIK new freight house of the New<br />

York Central at North Tonawanda,<br />

X. V., is now in use with telephones,<br />

Furniture and all other equipment<br />

complete.<br />

Since fire destroyed the former<br />

building, the Railroad freight office<br />

has been quartered in the passenger<br />

station on Main Street.<br />

The new freight house is of brick<br />

and steel construction. Every provision<br />

has been made for the comfort<br />

if the public using the building, as<br />

well as for the freight house employes.<br />

The building, trackage property<br />

i>nd equipment cost the New York<br />

Central $150,000. The commodious<br />

freight office on the second floor is<br />

thirty by seventy-five feet, wherein<br />

are located a private office for Harvey<br />

Varley, Agent, the general office,<br />

a record room, lockers and toilets for<br />

the men and women employes.<br />

The offices are equipped with steel<br />

('esks, chairs and tables. Lighting<br />

equipment is of the ceiling type.<br />

The freight house has a twentyfour<br />

car spot on the house platform<br />

and two team tracks with a nine-car<br />

spot each. There is room for additional<br />

team tracks as the business demands<br />

them. The house platform is<br />

equipped with an electrically operated<br />

crane for Hading and unloading heavy<br />

machinery.<br />

N.Y. Central Man Comes to Aid<br />

of Shipper, Procures<br />

New Traffic<br />

HE Buffalo Floor Covering Com­<br />

T<br />

pany was having considerable trou­<br />

ble with its shipments over another<br />

railroad. They "simply could not get<br />

anywhere. It came to a climax when<br />

a large shipment was lost somewhere,<br />

goodness knows where."<br />

Continuing, G. S. Reimann, of the<br />

Company, writes Assistant General<br />

Freight Agent Taylor of the New<br />

York Central:<br />

"A man by the name of F. Schosek<br />

in your office employ came to our<br />

rescue and did as much as anyone<br />

could do working for another railroad.<br />

He finally located our lost shipment<br />

about two days later and convinced me<br />

that it would be to our advantage to<br />

do all our shipping over the New York<br />

Central Lines.<br />

"Since then we have had peace with<br />

our customers and you can rest assured<br />

we will continue to patronize<br />

your railroad as long as we have any<br />

shipments coming in."<br />

Mr. Schosek is employed on the Revision<br />

Bureau Desk at the Carroll<br />

Street Station, Buffalo.<br />

Cleveland Being Advertised by<br />

Union Trust Company<br />

T<strong>TH</strong>E growth of Cleveland and the<br />

importance of its industries and its<br />

railroads are being emphasized in a<br />

series of advertisements published by<br />

the Union Trust Company of Cleveland.<br />

"Cleveland's on the Assembly Line"<br />

is the title of the first advertisement,<br />

Crater Lake, in Crater Lake National Park, Oregon, Is one of the notable scenic<br />

beauties of the West visited annually by travelers from every continent, as well as<br />

from all parts of the United States. The phantom ship shows In the water above,<br />

near the rim of the lake at the right.<br />

which is illustrated with a bird's-eye<br />

view of the waterfront" from which the<br />

new terminal of the New York Central<br />

rises head and shoulders above all<br />

other buildings. The terminal, costing<br />

$60,000, will soon be ready for use.<br />

The gist of the advertisement is,<br />

from an excerpt: "Cleveland's location,<br />

her railroads, her harbor, manufacturing,<br />

finance, steel—all these<br />

things are ready and waiting.<br />

"The present generation of Clevelanders<br />

has a glorious and inspiring<br />

opportunity, upon the realization of<br />

which depends much of the prosperity<br />

and happiness of every Clevelander.<br />

"Cleveland is in the making—help<br />

make it. You can't grow against your<br />

town, you've got to grow with it."<br />

War Veteran Receives Kindly<br />

Care on Train<br />

DISABLED war veteran re­<br />

A ceived the customary New York<br />

Central courteous and thoughtful<br />

service when he was transferred from<br />

Beacon, N. Y., to New York City,<br />

March 6. In gratitude, Terence<br />

Newsome, Business Manager of the<br />

Veterans' Hospital.of Beacon, writes:<br />

"In connection with a report submitted<br />

to this office by one of our<br />

Ward Surgeons who accompanied a<br />

patient on the 10:29 A.M. train yes­<br />

terday from Beacon to New York, we<br />

cannot neglect to write this letter of<br />

commendation for the wonderful service<br />

rendered by the personnel of the<br />

Railroad Company.<br />

"Not only did the Agent at Beacon,<br />

N. Y. (J. W. Moate) hold the train<br />

several minutes for the transfer of<br />

this patient, but the train conductor,<br />

Pullman conductor and porter went to<br />

a lot of trouble to get this patient<br />

properly looked after and comfortably<br />

arranged.<br />

"Upon arrival at Grand Central<br />

Terminal, again special attention was<br />

shown for the interest of this disabled<br />

veteran, all of which is sincerely appreciated,<br />

and it is gratifying to know<br />

that all emnloyes who came in contact<br />

with this patient rendered kind,<br />

efficient and loyal service."<br />

New Road Foremen<br />

William H. Gott has been promoted<br />

to Road Foreman of Engines on the<br />

Syracuse Division. Owen McEvoy<br />

and Charles Smith have been raised<br />

to the same position on the Mohawk<br />

and Hudson Divisions respectively,<br />

effective since March 29.<br />

Mr. Gott is the father-in-law of Al<br />

Smith. Jr., son of the Governor of<br />

New York. He entered the service in<br />

1890.


36 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Increased Tonnage over N. Y.<br />

Central is Shipper's Hope<br />

"[PROM N. G. Farber, Sales Manager<br />

of the Michigan Limestone &<br />

Chemical Company, Buffalo office,<br />

comes a letter expressing appreciation<br />

for service done on a large and<br />

efficient scale.<br />

"We wish to take this opportunity<br />

of expressing our appreciation for the<br />

fine manner in which you co-operated<br />

with us in the shipping of the solid<br />

trainload of Michigan Limestone to<br />

Dundee, N. Y., and vicinity on Saturday,<br />

February 25," writes Mr.<br />

Farber.<br />

"We especially appreciate the interest<br />

and co-operation which was<br />

shown on the part of your Assistant<br />

General Freight Agent P. E. Taylor,<br />

and especially that of your General<br />

Superintendent F. E. McCormack, Superintendent<br />

W. A. Hamler, and F. E.<br />

McGrath, your General Agent.<br />

"The co-operation which these men<br />

have shown us proves beyond question<br />

that they are serving in the<br />

interest of your railroad as well as<br />

the companies served by you, and we<br />

wish to assure you that we hope to<br />

reciprocate these many fine favors by<br />

showing you an increased tonnage for<br />

1928 and the years to come."<br />

Clerk on West Shore Gives<br />

Service That Pleases<br />

T OUIS GREENBAUM, employed<br />

by the New York Central as<br />

Delivery Clerk at Weehawken, on the<br />

West Shore, has won commendation<br />

from the Boissier Electric Corporation,<br />

expressed in the following letter<br />

to Superintendent J. E. Davenport:<br />

"As a general rule, superintendents<br />

are fully aware of the merit or<br />

lack of merit in their employes, but<br />

we feel called upon to draw your<br />

attention to an unusual experience<br />

we have had with your office.<br />

"For several days we had been<br />

anxiously awaiting the arrival of a<br />

shipment and had frequently been in<br />

telephone conversations with your<br />

Mr. Greenbaum in relation thereto.<br />

His courteous attitude and watchfulness<br />

in our interests are worthy of<br />

special mention.<br />

"Then again, his co-operation with<br />

our office in the disposal of the shipment<br />

after its arrival has been of a<br />

nature that the writer has not met<br />

with in twenty-five years.<br />

"We are delighted with this experience<br />

and hasten to say that it is<br />

a credit to you and to your organization."<br />

Train Flagged by an Observer<br />

L<strong>TH</strong>OUGH not connected with<br />

the railroad, William Willard of<br />

Edwardsville, 111., was aware of the<br />

necessity of further precautions when<br />

an automobile was driven into the<br />

side of an engine at a crossing west<br />

of Livingston, the night of February 7.<br />

Mr. Willard flagged an approaching<br />

eastbound train in time to prevent<br />

what might have been a more serious<br />

accident. H. F. Milligan, Superintendent<br />

at Mattoon, wrote him a letter<br />

of appreciation.<br />

Our happiness is the result of<br />

progress. Progress depends upon efficiency.<br />

Efficiency comes, vnly through<br />

Safety, and you and I are responsible<br />

for Safety.<br />

Exceptional interest is being shown by New York Central Lines Agents in Maintaining good Bulletin Board displays. The<br />

above is the High Bridge, N. Y., station with Assistant Agent McDonald in the role of passenger and Baggageman Edward<br />

Schooner as Ticket Agent. The neat, effective arrangement of advertising display attracts attention daily from commuters.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Revs.<br />

PRIESTS WHO ACCOMPA Nl ED <strong>TH</strong>E EASTER PILGRIMS FROM NEW YORK TO CANADA<br />

Michael A. Corr, Joseph Malone, Patrick J. Maloney, Thomas F. Curry, Roger McGinley, John J. Mulligan and<br />

John Donnelly.<br />

Conductor Lerch, M. C, Aids<br />

Woman Passenger<br />

TICHIGAN CENTRAL courtesy<br />

is well exemplified by the following<br />

official story:<br />

Conductor F. E. Lerch, of Train No.<br />

13, the New England Wolverine, on<br />

March 21 observed that a woman passenger<br />

was in evident distress. Politely<br />

inquiring whether there was<br />

anything he could do, he learned that<br />

she was on the way to Chicago to attend<br />

the funeral of her son but did not<br />

have the address and did not know<br />

where to go on arrival.<br />

Train No. 13 is due at Central Station,<br />

Chicago, at 2:15 P.M., and the<br />

funeral was to be held at 3:30 the<br />

same afternoon. Conductor Lerch<br />

telegraphed the circumstances to Superintendent<br />

Margetts at Chicago<br />

and requested him to look up the son's<br />

name in the telephone directory and<br />

telephone to the house that the mother<br />

would arrive on No. 13 and to meet<br />

her on her arrival.<br />

This message was sent from Jackson,<br />

and at Niles an answer was received<br />

that somebody would be on<br />

hand to meet the train.<br />

Section Man is Praised<br />

"JOSEPH ALDI, section laborer,<br />

whose name appears on the Honor<br />

Roll for the second time this month<br />

for having discovered and promptly<br />

reported a broken wheel on a passing<br />

(rain, has been highly complimented<br />

by one of his superior officers.<br />

"Mr. Aldi has worked steadily for<br />

the Company for eleven years," says<br />

W. A. Murray of New York. "He is a<br />

very faithful and efficient trackman,<br />

always doing his work to the satisfaction<br />

of the employer and always looking<br />

out for the best interest of the<br />

Railroad Company."<br />

Veteran Conductor Retires at<br />

Mount Carmel<br />

K. DOANE, Mount Carmel, 111.,<br />

Conductor on the Cairo Division<br />

of the Big Four, made his farewell<br />

run Saturday night, March 31, before<br />

going on the retired list. He held a<br />

Danville-Cairo passenger run.<br />

With his retirement, Conductor<br />

Doane completed forty-seven years in<br />

railway service. He entered the service<br />

with the Chicago & Eastern Illinois<br />

Railroad, running between Danville,<br />

111., and Chicago. For thirtyseven<br />

years he had been with the Big<br />

Four and for twenty-five years was in<br />

passenger service.<br />

Conductor Doane never received an<br />

injury of any kind in railroad work<br />

during all his almost half a century<br />

of service.<br />

Conductor H. K. Doane and Brakeman<br />

Fay Moyer near Mt. Carmel Station<br />

the day of Mr, Doane's retirement.<br />

37<br />

Detroit Holds First Airplane<br />

Exposition<br />

DETROIT'S first national airplane<br />

exposition, the All-American Aircraft<br />

Show, took place in Convention<br />

Hall, April 14-21, under auspices of,<br />

the Detroit Board of Commerce.<br />

Every inch of exhibition space had<br />

been reserved six weeks before the<br />

opening day. Forty-one manufacturers<br />

of flying ships had entered<br />

sixty-one different models, and fortyfour<br />

manufacturers of accessories and<br />

parts had taken space.<br />

One section of the show with a<br />

distinct civic appeal was devoted to<br />

airport building and management.<br />

Models of airports from many cities,<br />

and the newest designs by airport engineers<br />

formed the nucleus of this<br />

exhibit. Airport designers and managers<br />

who were in attendance held<br />

sessions on this important branch of<br />

aviation development.<br />

Pennsylvania Division Officials<br />

of 1903 Have Risen High<br />

HpHE Pennsylvania Division Time<br />

Table of June 14, 1903, showed the<br />

names of P. E. Crowley, Superintendent;<br />

D. W. Dinan, Chief Train Master;<br />

T. W. Evans, Train Master, and<br />

D. B. Fleming, Chisf Dispatcher.<br />

It is more than a usual coincidence<br />

that those men should have risen together<br />

and are now respectively,<br />

President, General Manager, Vice-<br />

President and Assistant General<br />

Manager of the New York Central.<br />

The foregoing was brought to the<br />

attention of the Magazine by F. E.<br />

McCormack, General Superintendent.


•8<br />

BISON HEADS ADORN <strong>TH</strong>E<br />

Encircling the fifteenth story of the New York<br />

Central's new office building in New York is a herd<br />

of seventy-eight heads of the bison (popularly known<br />

as the American buffalo) in a design which presents<br />

a distinctively new note in American architectural<br />

decoration. Below each bison head, which is shown<br />

in detail in the inset, are three varieties of subsidiary<br />

decoration, depicting the winged helmet of Mercury,<br />

god of Commerce; the mallet and fasces, denoting<br />

Development and Power; a pendulum supporting the<br />

wheels of Progress; the winged wheel of Advancement;<br />

the scroll of Wisdom, and other symbols of<br />

Research, Discovery and Engineering Progress. The<br />

bison heads, which are done in terra cotta, staring<br />

Beauty of New Office Building in<br />

New York is Appreciated by<br />

Observer<br />

/^TO"ERE is one who finds New<br />

York beautiful," says a headline<br />

in the New York Times. And<br />

beneath this head is quoted a letter<br />

to the editor, in which the New York<br />

Central's mammoth new office building,<br />

spanning Park Avenue just north<br />

of Grand Central Terminal, is cited<br />

as one of the city's newest and most<br />

spectacular objects, of beauty.<br />

Signed by Harold Butcher of New<br />

York, the letter reads:<br />

"This afternoon I crossed Park<br />

Avenue at Fiftieth Street and, looking<br />

down toward the colossal building<br />

now going up at the Grand Central,<br />

I was suddenly arrested by the realization<br />

that its effect has been to turn<br />

Park Avenue into the nave of a<br />

mighty cathedral. Even the shadows<br />

playing about the tower of the new<br />

building contributed to the beautiful<br />

and fantastic effect.<br />

"Here, then, is another of the many<br />

instances of sudden beauty in this<br />

amazing city. One would hardly expect<br />

to have one's thoughts stimulated<br />

in the direction of the Cologne Cathedral<br />

while crossing Park Avenue.<br />

But such was my experience.<br />

"New York grows and grows: and<br />

she grows in startling and unexpected<br />

beauty."<br />

<strong>Railway</strong>s Reduce Freight Robberies<br />

91 Per Gent<br />

kOES the remarkable reduction<br />

which has occurred in losses of<br />

freight due to robbery throw some<br />

light on the comparative efficiency of<br />

our railways and our governments?"<br />

says the <strong>Railway</strong> Age. "Nobody<br />

claims, we believe, that our govern­<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

NEW BUILDING IN NEW YORK<br />

down upon the hurrying crowds of the Terminal<br />

zone, have aroused the curiosity of thousands. The<br />

monumental building which they adorn now stands<br />

its full thirty-five stories high astride Park Avenue<br />

between Forty-fifth and Forty-sixth Streets. The<br />

last piece of steel was riveted into the structure<br />

April 5. When it is completed in January, 1929, it<br />

will house the executive offices of the New York<br />

Central and many firms of national reputation.. North<br />

and southbound traffic along Park Avenue will pass<br />

through the building and around two sides of Grand<br />

Central Terminal on ramps and viaducts. The.new<br />

office building which, "at the gateway to a continent,"<br />

is destined to become one of New York's<br />

landmarks, was designed by Warren & Wetmore.<br />

ments have _ recently reduced the<br />

amount of crime in the country, although<br />

the prevention of crime is one<br />

of their main functions; but the railways<br />

can point with pride to what<br />

railway police forces have accomplished<br />

in reducing losses of freight<br />

in transit resulting from robberies.<br />

"Under government operation of the<br />

railways, loss and damage to freight<br />

from all causes, including robberies,<br />

increased greatly and reached their<br />

maximum in 1920, in which year losses<br />

due to robberies from freight cars and<br />

other railroad property amounted to<br />

$12,726,947. Losses due to robberies<br />

have since been reduced until the corresponding<br />

figure for 1927 was only<br />

$1,151,136. In other words, in 1927<br />

they were less than 9 per cent of what<br />

they were in 1920."<br />

Safety that lasts is more important<br />

than Safety First. Form the habit.<br />

—H. C. Osborne, P. & L. E.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 39<br />

168 Years of New York Central<br />

Service in Family as John<br />

Anderson Retires<br />

TTOHN ANDERSON, Work Train<br />

Foreman on the Pennsylvania Division<br />

at Mahaffey, was retired February<br />

29, on pension, at the age of<br />

Mr. and Mrs. John Anderson<br />

sixty-five and after an unbroken<br />

period of forty-six years' faithful<br />

service.<br />

He first entered the service May<br />

10, 1882, as a laborer on the Fall<br />

Brook District, where he worked only<br />

a short time until he was transferred<br />

to the Beech Creek District. He was<br />

there promoted to foreman January<br />

25, 1884. He assisted in the construction<br />

of the Beech Creek Railroad, West<br />

Branch Valley Line, Curwensville &<br />

Bower Line and the Cherry Tree<br />

Branch. With the exception of a<br />

short period when he returned to the<br />

Fall Brook District to help in constructing<br />

the Corning Yards, he continued<br />

in service as foreman at various<br />

locations on the Beech Creek<br />

District until his retirement.<br />

An idea of his pride in his life<br />

work and the New York Central can<br />

be found from the fact that he brought<br />

up his five sons with New York Central<br />

service so instilled into them that<br />

every one of the five are employes<br />

of the New York Central: one a supervisor<br />

of track in the Electric Zone,<br />

New York; one an assistant supervisor<br />

of track; one a section foreman<br />

and one a section laborer on the<br />

Pennsylvania Division; and the other<br />

in the Transportation Department on<br />

the Adirondack Division. The combined<br />

service- of these five sons, together<br />

with the forty-six years of the<br />

father, totals 125 years' service to the<br />

New York Central. In addition, two<br />

sons-in-law and one grandson add<br />

forty-three years more to this total.<br />

A dinner was given him at Mahaffey<br />

on March 3 by a large number<br />

of his numerous friends at which time<br />

he was presented with a traveling bag<br />

and other useful remembrances.<br />

Mr. Anderson is in good health and<br />

will spend his retirement at his home<br />

in Mahaffey, Pa., with Mrs. Anderson.<br />

Joachim Lachat, Father of Four<br />

Central Men, Retires<br />

TOACHIM LACHAT, Section Laborer<br />

at Frenchville, Pa., was retired<br />

on pension December 31, having<br />

reached the age of seventy years.<br />

Mr. Lachat first entered the service<br />

as a section laborer at Frenchville<br />

August 26, 1912, and was in continuous<br />

service at that point as a<br />

laborer until his retirement. While<br />

his service with the Company has not<br />

been as many years as some, he is<br />

proud of his record and is a great<br />

booster for the New York Central.<br />

He has three sons who are now all<br />

working for the New York Central,<br />

and he had one son who was a train<br />

dispatcher on the Beech Creek District<br />

at the time of his death about two<br />

years ago.<br />

"Mr. Lachat has always been a<br />

faithful employe and a very competent<br />

track walker," said his division<br />

engineer, S. A. Seely.<br />

W. C. Christy, Ticket Agent at<br />

Oberlin, Retires<br />

I<strong>TH</strong> the best wishes of his superior<br />

officers and patrons, W.<br />

C. Christy, Ticket Agent at Oberlin,<br />

Ohio, retired March 1, after fortyfour<br />

years in railroad service.<br />

Mr. Christy was a messenger boy<br />

at Clyde in 1884, and was promoted<br />

to telegrapher in the following year.<br />

From then until receiving his last<br />

position at Oberlin, Mr. Christy has<br />

worked various stations on the line<br />

between Cleveland and Toledo, at the<br />

former terminal serving in the dispatcher's<br />

office. He was appointed<br />

ticket agent in 1900.<br />

His final day at the ticket window<br />

in Oberlin was marked by visits from<br />

friends who had worked with and<br />

known Mr. Christy for more than a<br />

quarter of a century.<br />

The local ems<br />

s ^ ^ B ployes of Oberlin<br />

^^^^^•JJjH presented Mr.<br />

Christy with a<br />

fountain pen on<br />

W t f ^ ,tH the eve of his re-<br />

H^^L_> JH tirement. Among<br />

BR1 JH the best wishes<br />

H » ^ B H expressed by citi-<br />

HMr'^fl zens of Oberlin,<br />

HikiH Hj was the following<br />

letter from John<br />

G. Olmstead, Secretary<br />

of the<br />

Alumni Associa-<br />

W. C. Christy tion of Oberlin<br />

College:<br />

"I note that you are retiring from<br />

active service with the New York<br />

Central and I cannot let the occasion<br />

go by without expressing a common<br />

citizen's appreciation of the fine personal<br />

and official service you have<br />

rendered here in Oberlin these many<br />

years. In all your service there has<br />

been marked geniality and willingness<br />

to do all possible for the accommodation<br />

of railroad patrons. Please accept<br />

my best wishes for many years<br />

of continued living in our midst."<br />

Mr. Christy is being succeeded at<br />

Oberlin by O. A. Betts of Elyria.<br />

George Glasco, on P. & E.,<br />

Retires<br />

T\/[rARCH 31, when he retired on<br />

pension, marked the termination<br />

of twenty-eight years of active and<br />

faithful service with the Big Four for<br />

George W. Glasco, Blacksmith at the<br />

Moorefield Shops of the Peoria &<br />

Eastern at Indianapolis. He entered<br />

the service of the Big Four at Wabash,<br />

Ind., in 1900, transferring to the<br />

P. & E. in 1921.<br />

His has been a life devoted to railroad<br />

service. He was born in Washington,<br />

D. C, March 31, 1858. When<br />

sixteen years of age he began his career<br />

as blacksmith with the Pennsylvania<br />

at Logansport, Ind. In 1886 he<br />

went to the Wabash at Peru, Ind.,<br />

and continued there after the Wabash<br />

became known as the L. E. & W. until<br />

1900. Since 1900 he has been in<br />

the continuous employ of the Big Four<br />

and P. & E.<br />

Says Mr. Glasco: "My connection<br />

with the Big Four and P. & E. has<br />

been most happy. A better gang of<br />

fellows, and a finer spirit of co-operation<br />

between the Company and employes<br />

is not to be found anywhere."<br />

On his last day of service, he received<br />

the best wishes and hearty congratulations<br />

of his fellow workers.<br />

Michael Fikley, Retired, Goes<br />

to Louisiana<br />

(T\& March 30, Michael Fikley got<br />

down from his train at Syracuse<br />

for the last time as a regular trainman<br />

on the New York Central. Then<br />

he went home, packed his grip and<br />

took another train for Baton Rouge,<br />

La., where his relatives live and where<br />

he is now resting up after fifty-one<br />

years on the road.<br />

When Mr. Fikley started braking in<br />

1877, matters weren't nearly so easy<br />

as nowadays, he comments. "I braked<br />

on the old Black Rock train from Albany<br />

to Syracuse and wore callouses<br />

half an inch thick on my hands, for in<br />

those days all trains were equipped<br />

with hand brakes. The old Black<br />

Rock had ten to twelve freight cars<br />

and a passenger train in the rear. It<br />

stopped at every station. I tell you, a<br />

man was tired after a day's run."<br />

Mr. Fikley was promoted to passenger<br />

brakeman in 1884, on the main<br />

line, and until his retirement worked<br />

between Albany and Syracuse. His<br />

home is at 144 Homecroft Road,<br />

Syracuse.<br />

At Rotterdam Junction the Stair family<br />

is happy together, since "Dad"<br />

Stair (F.A.) is no longer out every day<br />

on the road. He was recently retired<br />

by the New York Central after a long<br />

term of service as an engineman. With<br />

him here are shown Mrs. Stair and<br />

their son Floyd.


-to<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Engineman G. B. Lott was met by a large group of his associates when he finished his farewell run at Pekin,<br />

& Eastern last month. He was presented with a traveling bag.<br />

G. B. Lott, Who Helped Build<br />

P. & E., Retiring<br />

E helped build the Peoria & East­<br />

H ern, he has seen one official after<br />

the other take charge, and now G. B.<br />

Lott himself is retiring after fiftyfive<br />

years on that road. The engineman<br />

was presented with the traditional<br />

traveling bag from fellow employes<br />

on the eve of his leaving and<br />

the presentation was attended by General<br />

Manager Rose, Train Master L.<br />

C. Tyler and F. W. Carson, Road<br />

Foreman of Engines.<br />

Mr. Lott served as a water boy<br />

on the construction of the line, then<br />

known as the Danville, Urbana,<br />

Bloomington & Pekin Railroad. Later<br />

he was made a fireman and engineman.<br />

Since 1900, he has been a yard<br />

engineman at Pekin on the Big Four.<br />

L. L. Dorey Retires at Rochester<br />

HIRTY-ONE years of unbroken<br />

Tservice ended for Lawrence L.<br />

Dorey, Watchman at Rochester, N. Y.,<br />

March 1. For the first twenty-nine<br />

years of his career, Mr. Dorey was<br />

employed as a trainman, but his duties<br />

were later changed.<br />

For the past forty years he has been<br />

affiliated with the Democratic party<br />

of Rochester, and was also a member<br />

of the Railroad Y. M. C. A. On the<br />

occasion of his retirement, Mr. Dorey<br />

received letters of congratulation<br />

from numerous officials.<br />

W. S. Ballard is Traveler as<br />

Well as Engineman<br />

S. BALLARD, retiring New<br />

» York Central engineman,<br />

writes the following letter from his<br />

home in Cleveland:<br />

"My career as an engineer was not<br />

a very eventful one, as I think that<br />

running an engine successfully is a<br />

matter of using good judgment, as<br />

in all other branches of railroading.<br />

I never got into any serious trouble<br />

and always had fairly good success.<br />

"I started firing on the Lake Shore<br />

& Michigan <strong>Southern</strong> on December 4,<br />

1886, on the Erie Division, and was<br />

promoted in 1890. I fired the World's<br />

Fair flyers for Brother John Foote,<br />

who had at that time held the world's<br />

record for about seven years, but<br />

which has since been beaten by Brother<br />

Tonkey on the Buffalo Division.<br />

"On my retirement, I can't express<br />

praise enough for the officials and<br />

my co-workers on the old Lake Shore<br />

and New York Central.<br />

"I still take the same interest in<br />

soliciting transportation in the future<br />

as I have in the past. I have traveled<br />

quite extensively for an old 'eagle<br />

eye'—have been to Europe, also to<br />

the West Indies and South America.<br />

"Just to show you that I am still<br />

on my job, soliciting transportation,<br />

when I learned that a friend whom<br />

I had met while in Europe had left<br />

England on March 4 to come to this<br />

country to make her home in Detroit,<br />

Two reasons why W. S. Ballard Is<br />

glad to be on the retired list—his two<br />

small grandchildren at their home in<br />

Cleveland.<br />

III., on the Peoria<br />

I immediately wrote to her advising<br />

her to take the New York Central<br />

from New York to Detroit."<br />

Mr. Ballard lives at 585 East 102nd<br />

Street, Cleveland.<br />

P. & L. E. Retires Inspector<br />

F. J. Weidenkoff<br />

PARTING present of gold was<br />

A given F. J. Weidenkoff, who recently<br />

completed forty-six years of<br />

continuous service with the Pittsburgh<br />

& Lake Erie Railroad. L. Sutherland,<br />

General Storekeeper of the Railroad,<br />

made the presentation on behalf of<br />

the employes.<br />

When the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie<br />

was a single track line from Youngstown<br />

to Pittsburgh, Mr. Weidenkoff<br />

started work in the engineering corps,<br />

laying preliminary lines from Pittsburgh<br />

to Connellsville, Pa. Later he<br />

was transferred to the car shops at<br />

McKees Rocks as time keeper and<br />

clerk. He was again moved up as<br />

assistant storekeeper, and for the past<br />

twenty-six years has been a first aid<br />

inspector.<br />

Supt. Clark of B. & A. Retires<br />

H. CLARK, Assistant Superin-<br />

S• tendent on both the Boston and<br />

Albany Divisions of the Boston & Albany<br />

Railroad, retired April 30. At<br />

the close of his service, Mr. Clark was<br />

in charge of examinations.<br />

He was born at Waterbury, Conn.,<br />

in 1858, graduating later from the<br />

high school of that town. In 1875 he<br />

entered the service of the Boston &<br />

Albany as a clerk and operator at the<br />

State Line, and in 1881 he became<br />

agent there.<br />

Another promotion came in 1888<br />

when he was transferred to Rensselaer,<br />

N. Y., as assistant to the division<br />

superintendent. This work kept<br />

him there until 1901, when he became<br />

train master at Albany, being promoted<br />

to Superintendent of the Albany<br />

Division in 1910. His last promotion<br />

came in 1913.<br />

Mr. Clark lives at 36 Fairfield<br />

Street, Springfield, Mass.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Conductor Hendrix is Enjoying<br />

Leisure After 57 Years on<br />

Railroad<br />

<strong>TH</strong>EN this story appears in print,<br />

former Conductor Frank V. Hendrix<br />

will be lolling in his back yard<br />

watching the purple<br />

martins build<br />

their nests in the<br />

homes he has<br />

made for them, at<br />

543 Prouty Avenue,<br />

Toledo, Ohio.<br />

Nearby is his red<br />

shop where there<br />

is the finest array<br />

of tools any carpenter<br />

could wish<br />

for. Conductor<br />

Hendrix is enjoying<br />

his leisure,<br />

after fifty-seven<br />

Frank Hendrix years with the<br />

Railroad,<br />

serve under his new superintendent.<br />

A native of Corning, Mr. Heath entered<br />

New York Central service fortythree<br />

years ago as a brakeman. In<br />

1894 he was made a conductor on the<br />

same division with which he started<br />

and from which he retired.<br />

He has five children, including a<br />

daughter who is married to C. A.<br />

Holiday, Supervisor of Schedules.<br />

Mr. Heath's youngest son, Harold, is<br />

a senior at the University of Michigan<br />

and a member of the football team of<br />

that school. Mr. Heath hopes that<br />

"Bud" will join the New York Central<br />

upon graduation and help to "carry<br />

41<br />

Vaillant was made General Freight<br />

Agent at New York for the Erie<br />

Railroad, I took his position as agent<br />

at Cleveland.<br />

"At that time we had four freight<br />

depots in Cleveland, three for the forwarding<br />

of freight and one for freight<br />

received.<br />

"When I left we were employing<br />

135 clerks, twenty-one of whom were<br />

women and girls. There were 365<br />

truckmen and boys working there."<br />

Mr. Andrus is shown here as he<br />

appeared in his earlier railroading<br />

days.<br />

Patrick Hart Recommends a Job<br />

on the N. Y. Central<br />

Surprise Party in Ashtabula for F advice from veterans means any­<br />

Charles Mortenson I thing, many young men and women<br />

HARLES MORTENSON, for might be interested in what Patrick<br />

C twenty-one years a painter at Hart has to say on his retirement<br />

the New York Central Steel Car Shop, after forty-four years with the New<br />

Ashtabula, Ohio, York Central:<br />

Mr. Hendrix tells how, on<br />

his<br />

was pensioned "Any young man who desires to<br />

February 21. earn a decent livelihood should imme­<br />

fourteenth birthday, he started railroading<br />

as a "brakie." He has al­<br />

Mr. Mortenson diately try to connect himself with<br />

ways worked on the Michigan Divi­<br />

was honored by an honorable job on the New York<br />

sion. In those days, "braking meant<br />

his fellow work­ Central Lines and stay at it, develop­<br />

braking," with plenty of risks and<br />

ers at a party ing himself for any of the many ad­<br />

much work. On cold nights, above a<br />

held in the office vantages that there are in these days<br />

swaying car, Mr. Hendrix often<br />

at the Steel Car for promotion, with a management of<br />

crawled to his post of duty, pushing<br />

Shop the evening which myself and others have been<br />

a container of ashes ahead of him<br />

of March 8. Sev­ proud."<br />

which he sprinkled on the boards to<br />

enty-five had se­ Then Mr. Hart looks back to early<br />

assure a better footing.<br />

cretly assembled days:<br />

at the office, after<br />

"There wasn't any time-and-a-half<br />

"There have been many changes on<br />

which Mr. Mor­<br />

pay for overtime," he comments. "We<br />

the railroad during my lifetime. I<br />

tenson was ush­<br />

got a straight $5.50 for a run, no<br />

started on the Hudson Division as a<br />

Charles Mortenson ered in and then<br />

matter how long it took. Once I was<br />

wood cutter. Wood was used at that<br />

out seventy-two hours without sleep the grand party commenced.<br />

time, both for running the locomotives<br />

or rest."<br />

Accordion, banjo and guitar music and heating the cars. Few are living<br />

At twenty-one Mr. Hendrix was a was furnished and greatly enjoyed, today whom I recall working with in<br />

freight conductor, and a passenger after which O. G. Blood, General those early times. I remember old<br />

conductor in 1892. For the last eight Foreman of the Ashtabula Car Shops, friends such as Thomas Sherwood,<br />

years he has had the Century run be­ acting in the capacity of chairman Sr., Daniel Whalen, John White, also<br />

tween Toledo and Chicago. Among of the affair, called on several of the my last employer, W. J. Adams, and<br />

the great men he has met in railroad­ employes for impromptu speeches. Mr. W. P. Davis, Master Mechanic of the<br />

ing have been Presidents Garfield and Blood, in behalf of the employes, pre­ Mohawk Division, who were nothing<br />

Wilson. And high and low, they've sented Mr. Mortenson with a purse but kids filling minor jobs forty-five<br />

had to furnish a ticket when they of gold.<br />

years ago."<br />

rode on Mr. Hendrix's train.<br />

At the close of the party, Miss Ethel Mr. Hart makes his home at 319<br />

Johnson and Miss Lura Holbrook Orange Street, Albany.<br />

served refreshments.<br />

William Porter Retired<br />

Frank Balfrey Retires After<br />

45 Years<br />

riLLIAM JONES PORTER, Recalls Early Freight Days in<br />

Pumper at the water station of<br />

RANK BALFREY, who recently<br />

Cleveland<br />

Palmyra, N. Y., retired from service<br />

Fretired as Crossing Watchman at<br />

recently after thirty-nine years with HEN George Worthington An­ Syracuse, has had<br />

the New York Central. E. L. Jenkins, drus left the Railroad in 1910 as opportunity to see<br />

Supervisor of Buildings and Bridges,<br />

Agent at Cleve­ many changes<br />

and other officers extended to Mr.<br />

land, telephones and many places<br />

Porter their best wishes for his re­<br />

had not yet been during the fortytirement.<br />

installed, he five years he has<br />

Mr. Porter began as a laborer at<br />

writes. Starting worked with the<br />

Cold Water, N. Y., in 1889. Later<br />

in 1856 as a clerk, Railroad.<br />

he was made a pumper at that place<br />

Mr. Andrus Mr. Balfrey be­<br />

and was transferred to Rochester and<br />

worked his way gan as a laborer<br />

Palmyra.<br />

up, becoming chief at Cornwall in<br />

clerk in 1864 and 1883. From there<br />

agent in 1876.<br />

Conductor Heath Leaves Fall<br />

he was trans­<br />

"I commenced ferred to Bergen-<br />

Brook District<br />

railroading in field in 1886, to<br />

TILL in the best of health and<br />

1856 with the Weehawken i n Frank Balfrey<br />

S never having missed a pay day, W.<br />

Cleveland & To­ 1891, and to Syr­<br />

H. Heath of Corning, N. Y., has been<br />

ledo Railroad. acuse in 1893. He was made a gate-<br />

retired as Conductor on the Pennsyl­<br />

Addison Hills was man at the last place in 1893. His<br />

vania Division, Fall Brook District.<br />

General Freight final change came in 1921, when he<br />

Although Mr. Heath has earned a<br />

Agent and George was made a watchman.<br />

well-deserved vacation, he will by no<br />

H. Vaillant was Mr. Balfrey's friends and officers<br />

means be idle, according to Mrs.<br />

Freight Agent. I have spoken highly of his long term<br />

George W. Andrus<br />

Heath, who avers she has lots of jobs<br />

was a clerk in the of faithful service with the Railroad.<br />

around the house for her husband. office of Mr. Vaillant and in the course The veteran makes his home at 114<br />

Mr. Heath seems perfectly willing to of time became chief clerk. When Mr. Catherine Street, Syracuse.


42<br />

B i g F o u r C h o r a l C l u b G i v e s C o n c e r t s i n<br />

r<br />

jpHE Big Four Choral Club gave<br />

its third season concert at Emery<br />

Auditorium, Cincinnati, the evening<br />

of March 23. The Choral Club was<br />

assisted by the Withrow Senior Orchestra,<br />

numbering some sixty players<br />

of violins, violas, 'cello, flutes,<br />

clarinets, oboes, horns, trumpets,<br />

trombone, piano and piano accordion.<br />

Miss Edythe Tolken, violinist, gave<br />

several violin solos, accompanied by<br />

Amelia Howell Fowler, piano. Chester<br />

Markward, basso, sang, with Miss<br />

Beulah Davis as accompanist. Misses<br />

Anna Mutter and Aurelia Dittus, both<br />

soprano singers, had solo parts which<br />

were well received. Miss Rosalind<br />

Surdo is the accompanist for the club.<br />

The entire program was heartily enjoyed<br />

by a large audience.<br />

A number of Big Four officials<br />

attended the concert, including Vice-<br />

President H. A. Worcester, J. C.<br />

Wallace, General Auditor, Hadley<br />

Baldwin, Chief Engineer and others.<br />

The Choral Club gave a concert at<br />

the Norwood, Ohio, Christian Church<br />

Sunday evening, April 1, and on April<br />

13 gave another program at the Ad<br />

Club Night dinner at the Junior<br />

Chamber of Commerce, Cincinnati.<br />

William Koch of the Auditor of<br />

Freight Accounts Department was the<br />

organizer of this musical group and<br />

is now chairman of the club. The<br />

Athletic Association has sponsored<br />

the Choral Club activities and the<br />

Cincinnati employes and officials are<br />

proud of its accomplishments.<br />

The group was organized in January,<br />

1926, the members being recruited<br />

from offices, shops and train<br />

service. It now numbers some seventy<br />

Eight Safety Committee members and 122 visitors attended<br />

the Safety meeting at the Beech Grove Shops on the Big<br />

Four, March 28. Miss Anne Summers, First Aid Nurse, Is<br />

shown in her white uniform. On her right is J. A. Brossart,<br />

General Master Car Builder. On her left are R. H. Allison,<br />

Assistant to General Manager; D. J. Mullen, Superintendent<br />

cf Motive Power; Charles E. Hill, General Safety Agent;<br />

E. H. Landers, General Storekeeper; B. F. Orr, Superintendent<br />

of Car Shops, and A. W. Martin, Superintendent of<br />

singers, and is one of the largest of<br />

its kind among industrial organisations.<br />

Professor Joseph Surdo, supervisor<br />

of music at Withrow High School,<br />

is the director and when it is remembered<br />

that many of the singers were<br />

unschooled in choral work the accomplishments<br />

under this director<br />

have been remarkable.<br />

The Cincinnati Enquirer had the<br />

following to say about the concert<br />

of March 23:<br />

"The Big Four Choral Club is one<br />

of the active musical organizations in<br />

Cincinnati industrial circles and this<br />

society of mixed voices has made rap-<br />

A. J. Gehring, newly appointed Freight<br />

Agent at Fonda, N. Y., at his desk at<br />

the Edison Avenue freight office in<br />

Schenectady, as it was decorated by<br />

fellow employes before he left for his<br />

new position. Mr. Gehring has also<br />

been with the New York Central at<br />

West Albany Transfer, Cohoes and<br />

Rome, and was stationed during the<br />

war at Albany. Before his appointment<br />

to Fonda, made by W. E. Davey,<br />

General Freight Agent in Schenectady,<br />

he was Chief Clerk.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

id progress. The orchestra gave<br />

several selections and also played the<br />

accompaniments for the chorus. The<br />

latter manifested thorough training<br />

in the art of ensemble playing and<br />

as a supporting unit, and the former<br />

gave evidence of solid tonal volume,<br />

good control and even distribution of<br />

the parts."<br />

Employes Given Encouragement<br />

In Safety by Division Engineers<br />

"OECORD Safety performances on<br />

many of the divisions on the New<br />

York Central and its subsidiary lines<br />

have evoked words of praise which<br />

should serve as encouragement to employes<br />

on other divisions.<br />

C. W. Engle, Division Engineer for<br />

the Big Four at Wabash, Ind., sent a<br />

bulletin to his foremen which read:<br />

"General Motors and the radio stock<br />

booms in New York haven't a thing<br />

on the Michigan Division Safety stock<br />

boom in Indiana and Michigan for the<br />

month of March. Our Safety stock is<br />

now quoted at 100 per cent on account<br />

of no reportable accidents in the past<br />

month. All Michigan Division Maintenance<br />

of Way employes have received<br />

a dividend in the form of happiness<br />

and knowledge of Safety duty well<br />

done.<br />

"Let's keep our Safety Stock at 100<br />

per cent and receive a like dividend<br />

April 30, and all months to follow."<br />

On the Buffalo Division, B. M. Mc­<br />

Donald, Engineer, wrote to the supervisors,<br />

assistant supervisors, foremen<br />

and others in the Maintenance of Way<br />

Department:<br />

"Fellow Workers:<br />

"I am getting really proud of you.<br />

There is an old saying to the effect,<br />

that 'Pride goeth before a fall,' but in<br />

this case I am confident that there<br />

will be no fall and that you are well<br />

Locomotive Shops. Excellent Safety work is being conducted<br />

at Beech Grove. The Motive Power Department reduced the<br />

number of personal injuries from 145 in 1926 to 69 in 1927.<br />

The Car Department during the same period reduced the<br />

Injuries from 30 to 15, and the Stores Department reduced<br />

from 33 to 12, which makes all told a reduction from 208<br />

Injuries In 1926 to 96 in 1927. The first quarter of this year<br />

shows a continued progress, there not being a single accident<br />

in the Car or Stores Department.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

D J Hackett, Superintendent of the Middle Division of the Michigan Central, is holding the Safety cup awarded his Division<br />

for the excellence of the Safety record of the men. The presentation was made at a special Safety meeting March 6<br />

In Jackson, Mich., attended by Charles E. Hill, General Safety Agent of the Lines.<br />

on your way to break all existing records<br />

in accident prevention during the<br />

year 1928.<br />

"In the month of March you went<br />

along until the twentieth without accident<br />

of any kind. On the twentieth<br />

a section laborer's foot slipped on the<br />

ice, causing him to fall on a track<br />

rail and badly bruising his side. He<br />

made a noble effort to get back to<br />

work within three days but was utterly<br />

unable to do so. For this month<br />

we had only three other injuries and<br />

they were very minor.<br />

"This makes our record for the first<br />

three months of 1928, a total of three<br />

accidents, resulting in a loss of time<br />

of more than three days against eight<br />

for the first three months of 1927 and<br />

tweloe for the first three months of<br />

1926. I might say that the record<br />

you are making is being noticed by<br />

our officials and very recently I have<br />

had letters of commendation from the<br />

head of our department, W. A. Murray;<br />

from our General Superintendent,<br />

F. E. McCormack, and from our<br />

Superintendent, W. A. Hamler. They<br />

wrote me because they could not very<br />

well write to each and every one of<br />

you, but the congratulations belong<br />

to all of you.<br />

"I expect another good record for<br />

the month of April and I am hoping<br />

that this is a month that we will go<br />

through without any accidents causing<br />

a loss of time of over three days.<br />

We have gone through the three<br />

months of this year and December of<br />

last year with only one during each<br />

month, and it looks to me as though<br />

things were being lined up for a clear<br />

record.<br />

"Be sure that all the men under you<br />

are advised of the record we are making<br />

and the record we are striving for<br />

and do not fail to talk Safety First to<br />

your men as you put them on."<br />

George C. Allen, Retiring, is<br />

Honored in Corning<br />

HPHIRTY-NINE years of continuous<br />

service is the record of George C.<br />

"Major" Allen, Cashier in the freight<br />

office at Corning, Ohio, who was re-<br />

"Major" Allen at his desk in Corning,<br />

as it was decorated by employes the<br />

day of his retirement.<br />

tired on March 31 at the age of<br />

seventy.<br />

A banquet was given in his honor<br />

at the K. of P. Hall, prepared and,<br />

served by the Pythian Sisters of Corning,<br />

on the evening of March 31. It<br />

was attended by about two hundred<br />

people, including a large number of<br />

officers and employes. The "Major"<br />

was presented with a fine traveling<br />

bag and a pipe for which he thanked<br />

his friends and voiced his appreciation<br />

of the remarks of several of those<br />

present. Mrs. Allen was presented<br />

with a beautiful silk umbrella by Miss<br />

McCoy, Supervisor's Clerk, on behalf<br />

of the women.<br />

The New York Central band boys<br />

from Fultonham and Columbus played<br />

several selections, and vocal and instrumental<br />

numbers were offered by<br />

Corning talent.<br />

I. J. Ryan, General Yard Master,<br />

was in charge of the program, and<br />

the committee responsible for the arrangements<br />

consisted of P. H. Clifford,<br />

Yard Master; Clyde Thomas,<br />

43<br />

Clerk; George Parson, Car Inspector,<br />

and Edward Ferguson, Freight House<br />

Foreman.<br />

Railroad officials present for the retirement<br />

testimonial included J. J.<br />

Brinkworth, Superintendent; J. C.<br />

Davis, Federal Bureau of Explosives;<br />

Fred Wilson, Chief Clerk to General<br />

Manager; C. M. Lombard, Freigh;<br />

Claim Agent; L. H. Lehman, Assistant<br />

at the General Store, and Charles<br />

Jex, Master Mechanic. L. S. Emery,<br />

general manager, was unable to attend<br />

the event, and sent his regrets<br />

and compliments.<br />

Complimentary remarks were give.)<br />

by each of the railroad officials, and<br />

brief talks were offered by Mayor<br />

Barbee, of New Lexington, and Judg_-<br />

Berry, "of. the Columbus municipal<br />

court.<br />

Fewer Persons Killed in<br />

Crossing Accidents<br />

"[DEDUCTIONS in 1927 compared<br />

*' with the year before not only in<br />

the number of highway grade crossing<br />

accidents but also in fatalities resulting<br />

therefrom, have just been reported<br />

by the railroads to the Interstate<br />

Commerce Commission.<br />

Persons killed in 1927 as a result<br />

of such accidents totaled 2,371, or a<br />

reduction of 120 compared with 1926,<br />

while 6,613 persons were injured,<br />

which was a reduction of 378 compared<br />

with the preceding year.<br />

Reports showed 5,640 accidents at<br />

highway grade crossings during the<br />

past year, a reduction of 250 under<br />

1926.<br />

This decrease in the number of<br />

fatalities resulting from highway<br />

grade crossing accidents took place<br />

despite the fact there are now more<br />

than 23,000,000 motor vehicles in<br />

operation, an increase of 5 per cent<br />

over the number in 1926.<br />

The reduction in 1927 indicates that<br />

the railroads' Safety campaign is having<br />

some effect, but the railroads believe<br />

that still further decreases are<br />

possible.


T h e I m p o r t a nce o r A c c u r a t e v i s i o n i n<br />

P r e v e n t i o n o f Injury<br />

By Frank Mackin, Engineman, South em Division<br />

ACK of every accident there are<br />

B often many underlying factors<br />

not apparent at the time and place<br />

that have some bearing on the cause,<br />

and nowhere is this so true as in the<br />

matter of ability to see.<br />

Our sense of sight is the primary<br />

contributing agent for approximately<br />

70 per cent of our muscular activities.<br />

In many cases it is our response or<br />

failure to respond to visual impression<br />

that determines whether Safety<br />

or injury results. If indistinct vision<br />

causes a delay of even a fraction of<br />

a second in recognizing a point of<br />

danger, that delay may be just enough<br />

to tip the scales to the side of an unfortunate<br />

incident.<br />

Confidently, this is the explanation<br />

for many accidents where the injured<br />

person truthfully says he did not see<br />

the danger ahead. Beware of blindness<br />

due to the specular reflection—<br />

more commonly known as glare—from<br />

brightly polished material within the<br />

range of vision.<br />

The foreman in the shops should<br />

commence his daily work with the<br />

thought that he must, so far as it lies<br />

in his power, provide a safe place for<br />

his men to work. He should supervise<br />

his men by thoughtful consideration<br />

so that they will not be rushed in<br />

their work into becoming careless.<br />

Work can be performed expeditiously,<br />

and at the same time in a sane and<br />

safe way.<br />

Supervision is a leading element in<br />

accident prevention and the term implies<br />

more than a casual oversight of<br />

the men to be supervised. It means<br />

a human interest in their welfare. It<br />

is possible, in this consideration, to<br />

make the term so elastic as to include<br />

the engineman as supervisor of the<br />

fireman on his engine; or the conductor<br />

as the supervisor of his brakeman;<br />

the mechanic as supervisor of the<br />

helper who has been assigned to him.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Every foreman in every department<br />

should so undertake his duties as<br />

to have his men do their work in the<br />

safe way. Fewer errors and better<br />

quality work is a safe rule that brings<br />

rewards.<br />

Recklessness and What It Costs<br />

Employes<br />

TyRUISES, broken bones and other<br />

ID injuries, even deaths, are constantly<br />

occurring among railroad employes<br />

when a second's thought, a bit<br />

of care, would have kept the man<br />

alive and in sound condition many<br />

years longer. His life would have<br />

been happier, his family better cared<br />

for, if his recklessness had not deprived<br />

them of his capabilities.<br />

Examples of needless injuries to<br />

New York Central employes, all of<br />

them of recent occurrence, are given<br />

here:<br />

A brakeman's arm was amputated<br />

whin he fell and was run over while<br />

attempting to get on moving cars.<br />

Another brakeman had foot and<br />

ribs injured when he stumbled on<br />

running board and fell between moving<br />

cars.<br />

A baggageman, while crossing<br />

tracks ahead of passenger train, was<br />

struck by the train and killed.<br />

A ladder on a tugboat broke as the<br />

captain was descending it, and he was<br />

severely bruised by the fall.<br />

The hand of a car repairman was<br />

badly crushed while he was attempting<br />

to repair lock lifter on car. Other<br />

cars coupled on, catching his hand.<br />

An engineman was severely bruised<br />

about the head and back, when he<br />

fell from top of engine cab into a<br />

hopper car on an adjoining track.<br />

An electrician, while changing an<br />

electric light bulb, fell from the top<br />

of a twelve-foot ladder, breaking his<br />

collar bone.<br />

A bridge and building laborer was<br />

killed when he fell from top of engine<br />

house which his gang was preparing<br />

to dismantle.<br />

A car man off duty was crawling<br />

through ears on his way home from<br />

work. The train was moved and he<br />

fell and was run over. Result—three<br />

fingers of right hand amputated.<br />

While walking between two tractors,<br />

one of which was in gear, a<br />

crane operator caught his leg and<br />

fractured it as the switch was thrown.<br />

Stepping out of the way of a west<br />

bound train, a section laborer was<br />

struck by eastbound train and killed.<br />

Being struck and run over by engines<br />

or cars is still one of the outstanding<br />

causes of death to employes.<br />

A freight laborer's leg was badly<br />

strained when he stepped off the side<br />

of the bridge as he was trucking<br />

freight. His leg doubled up under<br />

him as he fell.<br />

Another freight laborer's foot was<br />

badly bruised while trucking freight<br />

with hand truck. He was struck by<br />

a tractor being operated by another<br />

employe.<br />

When two automobiles collided on<br />

a crossing, one struck the crossing<br />

watchman and fractured his ankle.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

ricultun<br />

^f^olations<br />

Special Train Through Ohio and<br />

Stimulates Sugar Beet Imdust<br />

By E.J. LeenhoutS, General Agricultural Agent, Lines West<br />

Part of the 250 sugar beet growers who gathered to witness the sugar beet demonstration of the New York Central Lines<br />

Agricultural Relations Department when the special train stopped at Charlotte, Mich.<br />

"HAT'S the matter with<br />

the sugar beet business?<br />

" W e all right—if you use<br />

horse sense."<br />

This was the chorus of two songs,<br />

different in words, but identical in<br />

tune, which were sung this spring on<br />

board two New York Central Lines'<br />

Sugar Beet Demonstration Trains,<br />

one in Ohio and the other in Michigan.<br />

While the Ohio folks were chanting—•<br />

"A Beet Where a Beet Ought to Be,"<br />

the Michigan folks were humming<br />

"More Tons per Acre Make Greater<br />

Profits," and everyone, including the<br />

New York Central Lines, joined in<br />

the mighty chorus quoted above.<br />

The subject and tune of the song,<br />

coupled with the immediate response<br />

following its singing, leads us to predict<br />

that it will have a greater sweetening<br />

effect than any song ever sung.<br />

At any rate, after two years of<br />

planning and consultations, and several<br />

weeks of intensive preparation,<br />

on February 6 the Ohio Sugar Beet<br />

Demonstration Train started from<br />

Toledo for Findlay to carry the message<br />

of better beet culture into twenty-six<br />

localities on our lines in Northern<br />

Ohio. This train, in charge of<br />

Earle G. Reed, Agricultural Agent,<br />

New York Central Lines West, carried<br />

with it as the main speaker one of the<br />

country's foremost authorities on<br />

sugar beets, Dr. J. A. Brock, Agriculturist,<br />

of the Continental Sugar Company,<br />

Toledo. Included in this threecar<br />

train was a lecture car and another<br />

car fitted up with a series of<br />

exhibits, prepared by the Continental<br />

Sugar Company, pointing out distinctly<br />

and forcefully the steps which lead<br />

to profits in the sugar beet business.<br />

The expense of these exhibits was<br />

borne jointly by the Continental, the<br />

Toledo, the Columbia and the Ohio<br />

Sugar Companies. Officials from<br />

these various companies were on the<br />

train from time to time to assist in<br />

the program and also did much to<br />

create interest in the train through<br />

advance work and publicity.<br />

The twenty-six meetings and thirtythree<br />

lectures were attended by 2,346<br />

people, or better than ninety people to<br />

each stop. Since the lectures and exhibits<br />

were designed to appeal to<br />

sugar beet growers only, of whom<br />

there are relatively few to each locality,<br />

this record indicates that a vast<br />

majority of the sugar-beet growers<br />

attended the train.<br />

Supplementing his slogan of "A<br />

Beet Where a Beet Ought to Be," Dr.<br />

Brock pointed out in his lectures that<br />

to get maximum profits a grower must<br />

(1) seed early, (2) fertilize properly,<br />

(3) save sturdy seedings, (4) cultivate<br />

consistently, (5) supervise the<br />

beet growers, (6) rotate crops properly,<br />

and (7) do fall plowing. Each<br />

one of these poi'.ts was brought out<br />

forcefully in his lecture and illustrated<br />

clearly by exhibits in the exhibit<br />

car.<br />

One of the exhibits which attracted<br />

a great deal of attention was that<br />

showing the part which the railroads<br />

play in the sugar beet industry. It<br />

showed that in addition to transporting<br />

the labor, seed, fertilizer, implements,<br />

limestone, etc., to the farm, the<br />

railroads of Ohio transported 100,000<br />

tons of coal, 10,000 cars of sugar<br />

beets, 80,000 tons of limestone to the<br />

Ohio factories, 2,000 cars of beet pulp<br />

back to Ohio farms, and 1,500 cars of<br />

sugar to various markets.<br />

The operation of this train was confined<br />

to points on the New York Central<br />

Railroad and the Cincinnati<br />

Northern, including the following<br />

towns: Findlay, Lime City, Dunbridge,<br />

Bowling Green, Pemberville,<br />

Hatton, Stony Ridge, Cygnet, Toledo,<br />

Elmore, Fremont, Millbury, Graytown,<br />

Oak Harbor, Curtice, Delta,<br />

45


46<br />

Exhibit In the Ohio Sugar Beet Train, showing the inter-relationship of railroads<br />

and the sugar beet industry.<br />

Archbold, Bryan, Cecil, Ney, Van<br />

Wert, Rockford, Celina, Ohio City,<br />

Paulding, Scott, and Sherwood.<br />

Just a month after the Ohio train<br />

started out from Toledo, a similar<br />

train started out from Lansing, Mich.,<br />

for a two weeks' tour of the Michigan<br />

sugar beet territory, with the slogan,<br />

•'More Tons Per Acre Equals Greater<br />

Profits." This train was operated<br />

over the Michigan Central Railroad,<br />

with the exception of the last two days<br />

on the New York Central. One car<br />

was equipped with exhibits of various<br />

kinds, prepared by the Michigan State<br />

College specialists, illustrating the essential<br />

points in successful sugar beet<br />

culture. Electrical contrivances helped<br />

to make the exhibits more effective.<br />

In addition to O. B. Price, Agricultural<br />

Agent, New York Central Lines<br />

West, who was in charge of the train,<br />

the staff consisted of C. R. Oviatt,<br />

Sugar Beet Specialist; J. W. Sims,<br />

Soils Specialist, and George Grantham,<br />

Soils Specialist, all of Michigan<br />

State College, and O. F. Jensen,<br />

Director, Soil Improvement Committee,<br />

National Fertilizer Association.<br />

A well-balanced program, consisting<br />

of lectures on soil management, use<br />

of fertilizers, and sugar beet culture,<br />

was given by these men in the lecture<br />

car. The substance of the message<br />

was the same as that presented on the<br />

Ohio train.<br />

Twenty-five towns were visited in<br />

twelve days and a total of 3,370 farmers<br />

attended. The twenty-one points<br />

on the Michigan Central Railroad had<br />

an average attendance of 148 farmers,<br />

while the four New York Central<br />

points averaged an attendance of sixty-five.<br />

The towns visited were Mason,<br />

Charlotte, Eaton Rapids, Chesaning,<br />

Owosso, Laingsburg, St. Charles,<br />

Saginaw, Auburn, Midland, Standish,<br />

Pinconning, Mt. Forest, Bay City,<br />

Munger, Reese, Richville, Ashmore,<br />

Owendale, Vassar, Caro, Blissfield,<br />

Ottawa Lake, Deer.field, and Monroe.<br />

The meeting at Caro was unique in<br />

that the Detroit, Caro & Sandusky<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> Company co-operated to the<br />

extent of operating a special train<br />

through its territory, bringing in 200<br />

growers to the meeting, giving them<br />

a special luncheon at noon prior to<br />

the visit to the cars. This contributed<br />

greatly to making the meeting at Caro<br />

the most enthusiastic and best attended<br />

stop on this schedule.<br />

Intensive Campaign Begun<br />

These two trains are the opening<br />

guns in an intensive campaign in our<br />

New York Central Lines territory to<br />

preserve and increase the sugar beet<br />

acreage on the part of all interested<br />

agencies. The industry means much<br />

more to the railroad than simply the<br />

revenue on the transportation of sugar<br />

beets to the factory. In fact, the total<br />

revenue obtained from a sugar beet<br />

plant will average 2.5 times the revenue<br />

obtained from the hauling of the<br />

raw beets. Of more importance than<br />

this item of direct revenue are the indirect<br />

benefits which we obtain from<br />

a prosperous farming community and<br />

the loss which we would suffer if this<br />

prosperity should be wiped out. The<br />

sugar beet acreage has decreased in<br />

Michigan from 150,000 down to 110,-<br />

000 acres, and in Ohio from 60,000 to<br />

about 30,000 acres. Various factors<br />

have contributed toward this, almost<br />

all of which can be overcome or, at<br />

least, rendered less effective. Every<br />

acre which is taken from sugar beet<br />

acreage is used for the production of<br />

some crop like corn, beans or potatoes,<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

all of which are already being produced<br />

in over-abundance. This would<br />

only aggravate the present farm situation.<br />

Sugar alone, of all our crops, is<br />

largely imported and could be pro­<br />

duced in vast quantities withou +<br />

fear<br />

of over-production. In fact, we consume<br />

four times as much sugar as we<br />

produce.<br />

The New York Central Lines are<br />

interested in stimulating greater interest<br />

in this sugar beet campaign<br />

because (1) it will result in greater<br />

profits to the grower and the manufacturer,<br />

(2) it will bring those parties<br />

closer together, (3) it will help<br />

solve the great farm problem of surplus<br />

crops and surplus acres, and (4)<br />

it will result in greater revenue for<br />

the carrier.<br />

Let us grow our own "sweets" on<br />

the basis of—"A Beet Where a Beet<br />

Ought to Be" and "More Tons per<br />

Acre Equals Greater Profits."<br />

Corn Prices Are Unrelated to<br />

Freight Rates, Study Shows<br />

jEFINITE relationship between<br />

freight rates and fluctuations in<br />

prices paid to farmers for corn does<br />

not exist, according to a study just<br />

completed by the Board of <strong>Railway</strong><br />

Economics.<br />

On the contrary, the study, which is<br />

a comprehensive one and which covers<br />

the four crop years ending with that<br />

of 1926-1927, shows that at points<br />

having the same freight rate to a primary<br />

market, the prices paid to farmers<br />

for corn not only differed considerably<br />

but showed no uniformity even<br />

in their differences.<br />

The general stability of freight<br />

rates on corn is shown by the fact that<br />

out of 260 freight rates from various<br />

points to principal primary markets,<br />

only twenty-one changes occurred during<br />

the four years covered by the<br />

study. Of these changes, all of which<br />

were in the nature of minor adjustments,<br />

sixteen were decreases and only<br />

five were increases.<br />

"During this same period, however,<br />

the prices of corn fluctuated from<br />

week to week, from month to month,<br />

and from year to year," according to<br />

a bulletin issued by the Bureau of<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> Economics giving the results<br />

of the study. "This marked contrast<br />

warrants the conclusion that the<br />

transportation cost was not the cause<br />

of the ever-changing price situation,<br />

but that other factors, singly or in<br />

combination, were responsible. Some<br />

of the price determining factors in the<br />

marketing of corn are: the time of<br />

marketing, the quality of the corn, the<br />

available supply, and the demand for<br />

corn."<br />

Commuters Honor Conductor<br />

Wheeler When Transferred<br />

npHE good will engendered by eleven<br />

years' association with commuters<br />

found expression last month when<br />

Conductor Morris M. Wheeler was<br />

transferred from the St. Vincent<br />

branch local out of Watertown to the<br />

Massena run out of Watertown on<br />

trains 17 and 8.<br />

From lone association, a strong<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

friendship had grown up among the<br />

thirty-two men who regularly took<br />

Conductor Wheeler's train. For several<br />

years they contributed to and<br />

printed a small booklet known as "The<br />

Detector" and published "semi-occasionally,"<br />

a paper of strictly humorous<br />

nature, containing purely personal<br />

remarks about one or another of the<br />

regular "gang".<br />

One night recently when the Massena<br />

train pulled into the Watertown<br />

station, Mr. Wheeler descended to find<br />

his former passengers lined up along<br />

the track. One of them "ailed to him,<br />

and the "skipper" approached suspiciously,<br />

anticipating some prank.<br />

One commuter then made a much-applauded<br />

speech and presented the conductor<br />

with a mahogany smoking<br />

stand and humidor.<br />

Mr. Wheeler is a veteran of thirtysix<br />

years' service with the New York<br />

Central. He lives at 1007 Academy<br />

Street, Watertown.<br />

Party in New York<br />

Members of the Statistical Department<br />

of the Auditor of Coal and Coke<br />

Accounts held their first annual "blowout"<br />

Thursday evening, March 15.<br />

After having dinner at Luchow's Restaurant,<br />

they attended a show at the<br />

Waldorf Theatre.<br />

Those present were W. I. L. Onyano,<br />

J. Boswald, W. Gates, J. Buese, W.<br />

Volcart, G. Lawrence, R. Slater, C.<br />

Larson and F. Austin.<br />

Interior of the exhibit car in the Michigan Sugar Beet Train.<br />

A Teacher, examining his class— Willie—A bung hole without a bar-<br />

I'll give a quarter to any boy that can rel around it.<br />

tell me what nothing is. Willie got the quarter.<br />

Safety pennants are flying high above stations on the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie and Eastern Railroads, since the Engineering<br />

Department of those roads made the best safety record in Group B on the New York Central Lines for the last quarter of<br />

1827. Some phenomenal Safety work has been done under the Jurisdiction of A. R. Raymer, Assistant Vice-President, and<br />

the immediate direction of E. W. Boots, Engineer, Maintenance of Way. The Engineering Department, with between 1,300<br />

and 1,400 employes, during the entire year of 1927 had only eight casualties, and during the last quarter of the year there<br />

was only one. The Safety sign on the platform reads: "This pennant is awarded to the Engineering Department for making<br />

the best record in the fourth quarterly contest of 1927 for the prevention of personal Injuries."<br />

47


48 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

N the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie<br />

O Railroad, where F. H. Babcock is<br />

Safety Agent and L. A. Lee is Secretary<br />

of the General Safety Committee,<br />

noteworthy results have been obtained<br />

from the propaganda spread among<br />

employes by means of posters, contests,<br />

individual instruction and Safety<br />

meetings at which original papers<br />

have been read by the men themselves.<br />

Two papers presented during February<br />

stated the P. & L. E. Safety<br />

situation clearly, and were aimed at<br />

spurring the departments on toward<br />

completion of their design. A third,<br />

by C. W. Endean, Inspector at Pittsburgh,<br />

offered practical Safety advice<br />

in sentences whose initials spelled the<br />

phrase, "Thirty-five per cent less accidents<br />

by nineteen-thirty."<br />

M. J. Cagney, Supervisor of Track<br />

at McKeesport, Pa., spoke with pride<br />

of the past record of his road, but<br />

warned his fellow workmen that a<br />

battle half won may yet be lost<br />

through over-confidence.<br />

"Accomplishments in the saving of<br />

human life and limb have been many,"<br />

said Mr. Cagney, "and we congratulate<br />

ourselves on our splendid record<br />

for the past year over those of preceding<br />

years as we enter into the work<br />

of the present year with enthusiasm<br />

and confidence.<br />

"It is not only natural, but quite<br />

proper that we should do so. But let<br />

us not overlook the fact that many a<br />

battle half won has been lost through<br />

over-confidence. We cannot afford to<br />

overlook the danger of that tendency<br />

to ease up a bit which usually follows<br />

first success.<br />

"It has been said that the secret of<br />

success is to keep on succeeding. This<br />

cannot be done if we are too well satisfied<br />

with past achievements. The<br />

Safety work is only well begun and<br />

must be carried on with undiminished<br />

vigor and alertness. We must continue<br />

to preach vigorously, practise<br />

Safety and be alertly watchful for the<br />

thoughtless and careless worker, as<br />

only through teaching and training<br />

can we make ours a safe organization.<br />

"Teach our men the safe way to do<br />

their work and explain to them why<br />

it is not safe to do it otherwise. Train<br />

them to do it the safe way by insisting<br />

on strict observance of the rules<br />

until you have them in the habit of<br />

doing it safely. By so doing, we will<br />

perfect an organization !. hich will<br />

work Safely, not only from habit but<br />

also from knowledge of the danger of<br />

working any other way. The man<br />

who cannot be trained is not only a<br />

menace to himself but to all and must<br />

be eliminated from the organization.<br />

"These are the principles upon<br />

which our success to date is founded.<br />

Let us not lose sight of them or<br />

slacken our efforts, but push on with<br />

undaunted courage toward the goal of<br />

Safety always and for all."<br />

After pointing out that few accidents<br />

and no deaths were incurred<br />

through carelessness at the Dickerson<br />

Run Terminal during 1927, W. H.<br />

Simmons, General Foreman in the<br />

Rolling Stock Department there, adds:<br />

"My object in bringing this report<br />

before you is to emphasize more fully<br />

the difficult task which lies before this<br />

committee and the employes of this<br />

terminal in order to reduce our accidents<br />

during the year 1928. For the<br />

period from January 1, 1928, to February<br />

16, records in all departments<br />

here show but one lost-time accident,<br />

which is a good record to start out<br />

with, but in order to maintain this<br />

record it will require the united efforts<br />

of every employe in the service.<br />

We, as a Safety Committee, pledged<br />

ourselves to make this a banner year<br />

for Safety on the P. & L. E. Railroad,<br />

and to do this will necessitate each<br />

one's being constantly on the alert for<br />

unsafe practices and conditions and<br />

keeping the Safety movement before<br />

the employes at all times.<br />

"The P. & L. E. is in competition<br />

with other roads in the Safety movement<br />

for 1928, and our President, Mr.<br />

Crowley, has been very generous in<br />

offering a cup to the road producing<br />

the best record for the year. We have<br />

no use for accidents. They cause only<br />

misery and suffering. But we do have<br />

use for the cup, so why not pull together<br />

and push this Safety movement<br />

to the limit, and trade, to the mutual<br />

advantage of all, the things we do not<br />

want for the things we do want?<br />

"Let every employe be safe on the<br />

job, the cup be in our possession, and<br />

eventually we will have 35 per cent<br />

accident reduction by 1930!"<br />

Safety as it is Practised on One<br />

Section of the Big Four<br />

By W. P. Whitlow, Houston, Ohio<br />

E were called off our section a<br />

W<br />

while ago to help another gang<br />

in changing a few rails and I noticed<br />

that when we picked up the first one<br />

and started to walk away with it that<br />

there were men on both sides. Now<br />

if someone should have stumbled and<br />

caused the rail to fall to the ground,<br />

someone no doubt would have been<br />

hurt or probably crippled for life. It<br />

does not take any longer to do it the<br />

right way, so why take a chance?<br />

In tapping down spikes we stay two<br />

rails behind one another for fear a<br />

spike head may break and fly off.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 49<br />

In cutting bolts, nuts, rails or anything<br />

that may fly we use goggles to<br />

protect the eyes. These goggles are<br />

furnished us by the Company and we<br />

should always use them when the jobs<br />

we are on require them.<br />

We never use a tool that is in any<br />

way broken or unsafe, for by so doing<br />

we know we are not only liable to injure<br />

or hurt ourselves, but are breaking<br />

and trespassing upon the Safety<br />

rules of the Company.<br />

When a train is approaching we get<br />

clear of both tracks, for we never<br />

know when a chunk of coal or some<br />

other loose article may fall and hurt<br />

or injure someone.<br />

We watch for hot boxes, brakes that<br />

might be stuck, or any loose piece of<br />

material that might be dragging beneath<br />

the cars, for should we find any<br />

of these causes we can easily give the<br />

trainmen a signal and possibly save<br />

them from having a wreck.<br />

While going or coming from our<br />

work, in passing a switch someone<br />

will say, "The banners are white," to<br />

which our foreman will answer back,<br />

and by doing this we never pass a<br />

switch without seeing that it is safe.<br />

Public Go-operation Needed in<br />

Safety Movement<br />

By W. H. Fortney, Fireman, Big Four<br />

N my fifteen years of employment<br />

I<br />

with the Big Four Railroad, Safety<br />

First has been my paramount thought.<br />

Many times in my work it has come<br />

to me how accidents could be eliminated<br />

if the public would only heed<br />

and co-operate.<br />

Even our employes do not practise<br />

Safety as they should. Time after<br />

time I have warned men about kicking<br />

the drawbar with their feet. A short<br />

time ago I witnessed a man doing<br />

this very thing; he consequently lost<br />

his foot. Had he practised Safety<br />

First he would not have been injured.<br />

I believe there is not a railroad<br />

crossing in the country that does not<br />

have some Safety First sign on it, yet<br />

a woman was killed by train No. 6 recently<br />

while I was on duty firing. She<br />

had been warned by the flagman on<br />

No. 45 that a train was approaching<br />

on the eastbound track. Nevertheless<br />

she stepped into the path of our train<br />

and was killed instantly. This is just<br />

another instance where the applying<br />

of the simple rules of Safety on her<br />

part would have proved beneficial.<br />

In the years I have fired for the<br />

Big Four my aim has been to be on<br />

the seat box at places where it is most<br />

dangerous, namely, passing through<br />

small towns with street crossings and<br />

over public highways. This enables<br />

me to warn the engineer about anything<br />

that looks unsafe.<br />

People in this day and age do not<br />

realize the danger that lurks at every<br />

railroad crossing: not only to themselves,<br />

but to the engineman and fireman<br />

as well. The least the public can<br />

do to lighten their burden of responsibility<br />

is to use caution and judgment<br />

at all crossings.<br />

The public needs to be impressed<br />

with the vital importance of Safety<br />

First, and when this is accomplished,<br />

every man, woman and child will<br />

think and act Safety involuntarily.<br />

A d v e n t u r i n g into Safety o n the M i c h i g a n<br />

C e n t r a l<br />

By C. J. Burrough, Train Master, Michigan Central<br />

N the United States during the year<br />

I 1920 more than six per cent of all<br />

the deaths were violent deaths. In<br />

other words, out of every one hundred<br />

persons who died, six lost their lives<br />

because someone was careless.<br />

It has been said that "accidents will<br />

happen." However, education is the<br />

first step toward eliminating accidents—the<br />

realization of the importance<br />

of Safety.<br />

As we look over the year just passed<br />

we can see many things that were<br />

accomplished, which will make 1928,<br />

if improvements continue, the banner<br />

year.<br />

"Safety that lasts" is more important<br />

than "Safety First." Most mistakes<br />

are excusable only in so far as<br />

they are not carelessly repeated.<br />

The fact is, of course, that Safety<br />

is not the prime object in life. The<br />

most important object in the world is<br />

adventure, and by adventure I mean<br />

a fresh, first-hand experience of life.<br />

Safety then is leagued together in the<br />

noble company of recreation, love,<br />

friendship, loyalty, knowledge, art,<br />

creed and all the other main forces<br />

of life.<br />

A human life is the gift of Almighty<br />

God, and as such should be treasured<br />

and preserved. It is upon this bedrock<br />

that the Safety movement has<br />

built its admirable, effective structure.<br />

The whole world has responded<br />

to the inspiration and is moving forward<br />

with hope and confidence.<br />

What do you choose to have thrown<br />

out of your life and what do you<br />

choose to have put in its place? As<br />

for me, I choose adventure. I choose<br />

to have the bad adventure thrown out<br />

and the good adventure brought in,<br />

because I believe that adventure is in<br />

truth the deep, significant value in<br />

life, and by that token I believe that<br />

we have the real meaning of Safety.<br />

One year has gone, another one is<br />

here. Great work was done in 1927<br />

under the guidance of our Safety<br />

agents and committees. Our committee<br />

has gained strength in meeting<br />

with emergencies during the past year<br />

"Dis-obey that impulse!" is the title<br />

of the above poster printed in the<br />

Albany Buick News, which offers the<br />

suggestion that a good Safety stunt<br />

is to slow down and shift into second<br />

gear before crossing a railroad track.<br />

and, at times, we are subject to a<br />

test to prove our fitness. The Michigan<br />

Central Railroad has, and will<br />

always have, problems arise, and it is<br />

good for you and me to speak frankly<br />

of the great problems to be solved<br />

during 1928.<br />

The Safety agents and committees<br />

must be supported by the active backing<br />

of all railroad men who are capable<br />

of contributing to the cause.<br />

Our fields of endeavor touch upon<br />

so many phases of activity, there is<br />

work for all. A greater activity of a<br />

larger number is needed to sustain<br />

and maintain the purpose which the<br />

Safety agents and committees are trying<br />

to accomplish.<br />

We cannot all be on the committee,<br />

but we can all fill such effort with<br />

meaning by our support. The great<br />

work is yet to be done. More heads<br />

are needed.<br />

What a Mile of <strong>Railway</strong> Does<br />

in a Day<br />

//npHE average mile of railway line<br />

in the United States last year<br />

handled seven passenger trains and<br />

seven freight trains each day," says<br />

the <strong>Railway</strong> Age, in a discussion of<br />

the service performed by the steam<br />

railroads of the United States.<br />

"In dealing with railway traffic figures<br />

running into hundreds of millions<br />

and billions," continues the <strong>Railway</strong><br />

Age, "it is sometimes difficult to visualize<br />

the amount of work which is performed,<br />

on the average, by the units<br />

of the railway plant. The following<br />

figures, therefore, have been prepared<br />

on the average daily operations of<br />

each mile of railway line.<br />

"In the seven freight trains which<br />

passed each day over this average<br />

mile of railway there were 325 freight<br />

cars, of which 205 were loaded and<br />

120 empty. In the loaded cars was<br />

freight weighing, roughly, 5,600 tons,<br />

while the total weifcnt passing over<br />

this mile of line, including freight,<br />

locomotives and freight cars, was<br />

14,400 tons. The seven daily passenger<br />

trains which ran over this average<br />

mile included 46 passenger train<br />

cars and carried a total of 416 passengers.<br />

"The daily gross revenues earned by<br />

this average mile of railway line<br />

amounted to $72. The average direct<br />

operating expenses consumed 74 per<br />

cent of these total earnings, or $53<br />

daily. Next, a total of $4 a day was<br />

paid by this average mile to local,<br />

state and national tax collectors. After<br />

the payment of certain other expenses,<br />

including rental charges for<br />

property belonging to others, the average<br />

daily net earnings of this typical<br />

mile of railway line amounted to $13.<br />

This daily average net earning figure<br />

of $13 amounted in a year to a return<br />

of approximately 4% per cent on the<br />

average railway property investment<br />

per mile.


50 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Keystone Photo.<br />

Fifty-three mail handlers and clerks on board four New York Central tugs are<br />

meeting the Aquitania here at Quarantine, at the entrance to New York Harbor,<br />

to receive mail from Europe. As fast as the bags are transferred from steamer<br />

to tug the contents are sorted, so that by the time the tugboats reach shore the<br />

mail is ready to be sped onward. Frequently it is already on trains for other parts<br />

of the country before the liner has docked. In one unloading, fifty-four truckloads,<br />

totaling 16,000,000 pieces of mail, were taken from the boat in eighty-four minutes.<br />

r t r<br />

President C r o w l e y , i n F l o r i d a , Tells B o y s<br />

a n d G i r l s o f H i s Start i n R a i l r o a d i n g<br />

TCpNJOYING a much needed rest in<br />

Florida last month, President P.<br />

E. Crowley was invited to address<br />

the senior class of the St. Petersburg<br />

High School. He told them of his<br />

career from messenger boy to President<br />

of the New York Central Lines.<br />

The St. Petersburg Times quotes<br />

Mr. Crowley as saying: "I do not<br />

make speeches for two reasons; one<br />

is, I think, the world would be better<br />

off without half of them, and the other<br />

reason is, I can't.<br />

"I was born in Cattaraugus, N. Y.,<br />

and was forced to quit school when<br />

I was fourteen. I then started my<br />

apprenticeship as a messenger boy at<br />

a salary of $5 a month. I learned<br />

telegraphy and became a telegraph<br />

operator in a small country station<br />

in the oil fields of Pennsylvania at<br />

$40 a month, which was then considered<br />

good pay.<br />

"It may interest you to know my<br />

duties in this new position. At 7 o'clock<br />

the first train came in. I shoveled<br />

the snow from the platform,<br />

built a fire, went to the post office<br />

for tiie mail, sorted the mail, sold<br />

tickets, and sent and received messages.<br />

After I got that done, I went<br />

to breakfast.<br />

"Returning, I swept the room and<br />

dusted, walked a half mile in opposite<br />

directions to remove switch lights,<br />

which I cleaned and returned; then<br />

I unloaded freight and made it ready<br />

for distribution. The last train came<br />

in at 9 o'clock and after delivering<br />

the mail and serving the train, my<br />

duties were done, and I want to tell<br />

you, boys and girls, I was happy in<br />

my work.<br />

"I am asked frequently if there<br />

is an opening in the field of railroading<br />

for young men, and I always say,<br />

'It depends on the young man.' Persistence,<br />

willingness to do hard work<br />

and the patience to wait your turn,<br />

are necessities in rising to the top.<br />

Every executive officer of the New<br />

York Central Railroad has worked<br />

his way up from the bottom."<br />

Mr. Crowley proved to be a most<br />

popular visitor, and the Times added:<br />

"His talk was interspersed with<br />

smiles, for he is rollicking, shy and<br />

whimsical and says he does not know<br />

how to make speeches, dependable<br />

transportation being his one object<br />

and joy."<br />

The high school orchestra played<br />

several selections in honor of Mr.<br />

Crowley.<br />

Education for Tolerance<br />

a Need of Nations<br />

TTNDER the title, "Education for<br />

Tolerance," an essay by John E.<br />

J. Fanshawe was published in the<br />

February number of Independent<br />

Education, a New York periodical,<br />

which attracted so much favorable attention<br />

that it has now been republished<br />

in neat board covers for wider<br />

distribution.<br />

The author punctures one of our<br />

pet delusions ruthlessly, but when one<br />

comes to think of it, the puncturing<br />

was urgently needed. "Just now,"<br />

says Mr. Fanshawe, "the particular<br />

field that is overtaxing the time and<br />

energies of the sentimentalist is the<br />

establishment of friendly relations<br />

between the United States and the<br />

British Empire. This is most unfortunate<br />

because there is no problem<br />

before the world today more delicate.<br />

Upon its outcome depends the future<br />

course of civilization. Here is no<br />

place for the novice. The question of<br />

Anglo-American relations requires the<br />

entire time, brains and experience of<br />

such men as the Hugheses and the<br />

Hoovers, the Balfours and the Baldwins.<br />

. . .<br />

"The errors that have crept into<br />

this all too prevalent pastime are so<br />

many and so devious that it is difficult<br />

to know where to begin to enumerate<br />

them. _ The most flagrant one, perhaps,<br />

is that of assuming we are one<br />

and the same people and that, because<br />

by chance we have derived our language,<br />

our laws and our literature<br />

from England we should, therefore,<br />

be friendly with the British Empire.<br />

"This is far from the truth. We<br />

are not the same people. We are two<br />

very distinct and different peoples.<br />

We have not the same ideas and ideals,<br />

and the same motives do not underlie<br />

our actions. . . .<br />

"This much vaunted boon of speaking<br />

the same language is quite as<br />

great a detriment as it is an advantage.<br />

Were it not for this the man<br />

on the street in Great Britain could<br />

not have conveyed to him so readily<br />

the irresponsible innuendoes about th :<br />

:<br />

annexation of <strong>Canada</strong> nor could the<br />

average American read with such ease<br />

the caustic remarks about this country<br />

that occasionally fall from the lips of<br />

some subjects of King George."<br />

Language of Little Influence<br />

Asserting that he knows of no instance<br />

in history where the mere fact<br />

of a common language tended to bring<br />

two peoples together, Mr. Fanshawe<br />

reminds his readers that the bitterest<br />

feuds have been between members of<br />

the same family. He cites our own<br />

Civil War in support of this position.<br />

"The fundamental reasons for Anglo-American<br />

understanding and cooperation<br />

are first, economic—dollars<br />

and cents on one side, pounds, shillings<br />

and pence on the other; and the second<br />

is biologic, by appealing to the<br />

most basic instinct of mankind—selfpreservation.<br />

From the economic side<br />

it must be shown that through cooperation<br />

and not by competition we<br />

shall both be the gainers. . . . The<br />

world is rapidly nearing the saturation<br />

point of population. Barring a<br />

second flood, which Mark Twain suggested<br />

as the only effective remedy,<br />

we shall soon be confronted, unless<br />

human nature radically changes itself,<br />

with an onslaught which will be made<br />

upon us. Neither of us alone can<br />

possibly defend ourselves. Together<br />

we may be able to meet it successfully.<br />

A far greater benefit, however, would<br />

be that the knowledge of our united<br />

strength might make other nations<br />

take a more reasonable attitude and<br />

not plunge the world into a conflict<br />

which would make the late war seem<br />

like a dress parade."<br />

Altogether, Mr. Fanshawe has given<br />

his fellow-countrymen something to<br />

think about.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

A<br />

C h o o s i n g the M o d e r n D i e t o f Thoughts<br />

MAN said to me the other day:<br />

"I would rather be alive today,<br />

to watch and have a part in the progress<br />

of things during the next twentyfive<br />

years, than to have lived during<br />

any other time in the world's history."<br />

I was surprised—and interested.<br />

Have you ever noticed how few of the<br />

people you meet really prefer the<br />

situation they are in to any other? I<br />

do not mean the ones who accept anything<br />

that comes their way like the<br />

proverbially placid cow, but those men<br />

and women who are vividly interested<br />

in each situation, eager to make the<br />

most of it before going on, yet keenly<br />

aware of the potentialities for the<br />

future. Those who possess that alivewess,<br />

who are happy in their work<br />

and who "get on" seem to us the lucky<br />

ones. What are the essential differences<br />

between them and the ones who<br />

perhaps try to be contented but who<br />

never seem to fit very well into the<br />

job, or to have many good times or<br />

much prospect for the future?<br />

Let me tell you first some sound<br />

scientific facts, things you have probably<br />

always known but which not<br />

many of us put .into daily practice,<br />

and then I am going to give you a<br />

questionnaire to test yourself with.<br />

First of all, have you stopped to<br />

consider that now, more than at any<br />

moment in the world's history, the<br />

sciences, philosophy, psychology, the<br />

religions of the world, the wisdom of<br />

the universe, are within the reach, not<br />

of the fortunate few, as in the days<br />

of ancient Greece and Rome, but within<br />

my reach and yours? Truly it is<br />

an exciting moment to live when millions<br />

of little volumes containing the<br />

wisdom and literature of all the ages<br />

are sold for five cents a copy, and<br />

when such books as "The Story of<br />

Philosophy" "Why We Behave Like<br />

Human Beings" and "This Believing<br />

World" become best sellers.<br />

What Do We Do With Our Knowledge?<br />

By K. P. L. B.<br />

Now the question is, since we are<br />

fortunate enough to have open before<br />

us great treasure houses of fascinating<br />

knowledge, what do we do with it?<br />

Do we use it to make ourselves the<br />

interesting, effective, powerful men<br />

and women we admire?<br />

Within the last decade we have<br />

heard for the first time of vitamines.<br />

(This may not sound as though it has<br />

anything to do with this little story,<br />

but it has!) Of course, we ate vitamines<br />

before we knew their names or<br />

realized how essential they were to<br />

our well-being, but today we do it intelligently,<br />

consciously. Today we<br />

know how to cut down on calories,<br />

increase our supply of vitamines, to<br />

make ourselves fat or thin, to build<br />

brain or muscle as circumstances require,<br />

simply by a choice of what we<br />

eat.<br />

And now let us apply our wisdom<br />

a step further. Science has taught<br />

us that we can build our bodies—and<br />

to that extent our health and happiness—by<br />

what we put into them. It<br />

is also true, though less widely rec­<br />

ognized, that we build our minds—<br />

and to an even greater degree our<br />

health and happiness—by what we put<br />

into them. Shall we choose the materials<br />

with which we build our bodies<br />

and accept haphazard anything that<br />

falls in our path for the building of<br />

our minds? What sort of thoughts<br />

do we allow to enter our minds and<br />

become a part of us?<br />

A Questionnaire on Thought<br />

Put this questionnaire to yourself<br />

and check up on what type of thought<br />

is building your mind:<br />

1. What are your first thoughts on<br />

waking?<br />

2. What are your last thoughts bebefore<br />

going to sleep?<br />

3. Do you read all the advertisements<br />

within your line of vision<br />

on the street car or subway?<br />

4. Can you concentrate on the image<br />

of one single thing—say a<br />

cluster of clover in a field—while<br />

things are going on around you?<br />

5. How long can you concentrate on<br />

a single object—say the face of<br />

someone you know well—with<br />

your eyes closed?<br />

A Word to the Wise<br />

By Clarence Mansfield Lindsay<br />

HpHOUGH you work like a very<br />

demon;<br />

Though you lead them all in<br />

speed;<br />

Though you never waste time in<br />

dreaming,<br />

And you put your best in each<br />

deed;<br />

Though the fruits of your honest<br />

labor<br />

Keep your loved ones housed and<br />

fed;<br />

Here's the question of questions,<br />

neighbor—<br />

Have you ever a dollar ahead?<br />

Though the job you hold you are<br />

filling<br />

Far better than most men may;<br />

Though you're able and strong and<br />

willing,—<br />

Have you thought ef a rainy day?<br />

The time may come when you're<br />

ailing;<br />

When the strength nt your arm<br />

is sped!<br />

If ever your powers are failing,<br />

Will you then have a dollar<br />

ahead?<br />

It's not, my friend, what you're<br />

earning!<br />

Nay, it's rather how much you<br />

save !<br />

If every cent you are "burning,"<br />

Why, you're little more than a<br />

slave!<br />

The time may come when you're<br />

needing<br />

A pittance to buy you bread!<br />

So here is a query worth heeding—<br />

Have you ever a dollar ahead?<br />

6. Can you see every detail of features<br />

and expression?<br />

7. Can you learn a short verse by<br />

heart in the car or subway?<br />

8. Do you read with a purpose?<br />

(a) Do you remember what<br />

you read?<br />

(b) Can you tell what you<br />

read?<br />

9. Do you read the details of murders,<br />

fires, hold-ups, divorce cases<br />

in the daily papers?<br />

10. Do you worry about things at<br />

times when you can't do anything<br />

about them?<br />

If you find that you have a "negative<br />

average" on this list, it's time to<br />

change your diet of thoughts!<br />

Try the following suggestions and<br />

see if you don't find a radical change<br />

toward increased well-being, even<br />

within a week or two.<br />

1. Choose your thoughts! Watch<br />

them like a cat to see that only desirable<br />

ones—thoughts of health, success,<br />

affection, friendship, whatever<br />

are the things you want—"get inside."<br />

If others start to get in—and they<br />

will—crowd them out. This is not<br />

Christian Science or Coue-ism or the<br />

doctrine of Pollyanna, but a psychology<br />

which should be a stone in the<br />

foundation of every religion or cult.<br />

Concentration and Achievement<br />

2. Teach yourself to concentrate.<br />

Try it first by picturing and holding<br />

a stationary object. When you can do<br />

that to your satisfaction (without allowing<br />

any other thought or picture<br />

to intrude) try it with a moving object.<br />

Follow with your mind's eye<br />

every move of a little brown dog trotting<br />

down the street.<br />

3. Read only the articles in the papers<br />

that have something you want<br />

in them.<br />

4. Watch particularly to see that<br />

only happy thoughts are "allowed in"<br />

just before going to sleep. Dr. Frederick<br />

Pierce, in his book, "Our Unconscious<br />

Mind," says: "Five minutes,<br />

just before going to sleep, given to a<br />

bit of directed imagination regarding<br />

achievement possibilities of the morrow<br />

will steadily and increasingly<br />

bear fruit, particularly if all ideas of<br />

difficulty, worry, or fear are absolutely<br />

ruled out and replaced by those<br />

of accomplishment and smiling courage."<br />

5. If you go in for this "diet of<br />

thought," do it steadily.<br />

Practical results can be obtained<br />

only through constant vigilance and<br />

direction, but the changes possible in<br />

one's self and one's surroundings are<br />

amazing. I will give you next month,<br />

if you are interested, several more<br />

simple suggestions for turning<br />

thoughts into reality.<br />

Fred Ammerman<br />

Fred Ammerman of Irvona, Pa.,<br />

died there April 7. Mr. Ammerman<br />

retired in 1925 as a Brakeman on the<br />

Pennsylvania Division. He began<br />

service with the New York Central in<br />

1898.<br />

51


52<br />

John R. Burke, who has just retired after fifty-five years of railroad service, most<br />

of the time as an engineman for the New York Central, drove the above engine for<br />

six years between Newark and Frankfort, N. Y. The photograph was taken in the<br />

summer of 1888, at Canastota on the Mohawk Division.<br />

A n Eragieemae's M e m o r i e s o f L o n g A g o<br />

DEDICATING his story to the memory of the men he has worked with and<br />

whom he names in his reminiscences, John R. Burke, retiring engineman,<br />

has written for the New York Central Lines Magazine the following<br />

tale of the early days. Among the veteran railroaders vjhom he recalls<br />

are several mentioned by F. A. Chase in the article pn-inted in the December<br />

issue of the Magazine.<br />

Mr. Burke, who began his railroad career fifty-five years ago, starting<br />

with the New York Central eleven years later, came unharmed through the<br />

early days of primitive equipment, and was retired as engineman on the<br />

Syracuse Division early this year.<br />

ORN December 11, 1857, at Au­<br />

B burn, N. Y., and brought up there,<br />

I entered the service of the New York<br />

Central Railroad in November, 1872,<br />

on the old Auburn work train.<br />

There was a gang of twenty to<br />

twenty-five men on the train. I did<br />

the same work as the other men, and<br />

received the same wages—$1.50 for<br />

twelve hours' work. I was not yet<br />

fifteen years old, and I never was a<br />

water boy. I flanged the track in<br />

winter with wooden shovels before<br />

there was any such thing as a flanger<br />

car. I picked and shoveled gravel in<br />

Half-Way Gravel Pit before there was<br />

any steam shovel, and more than one<br />

day I had to sit in a snow bank and<br />

eat frozen food when noon-time came.<br />

Dan Shapcott was the engineer<br />

and was also the conductor who hired<br />

and discharged the men, kept the time<br />

of the men and supervised all the<br />

work. His engine was the 206. Our<br />

working territory was from Syracuse<br />

to Geneva. Hank Hall was road master<br />

and he had two brothers—"Ed,"<br />

section foreman at Cayuga, and "O.<br />

J.," conductor of the Canandaigua<br />

work train. Commodore Vanderbilt<br />

was president and William H. Vanderbilt,<br />

his son, was vice-president<br />

then. James Tillinghast was general<br />

superintendent. William G. Lapham<br />

was division superintendent with offices<br />

at Syracuse, and from Syracuse<br />

to Rochester was a division on'both<br />

the main line and Auburn road.<br />

Twenty-five to thirty cars (with not<br />

more than ten tons of freight in each<br />

car) comprised a train in those days.<br />

DeWitt freight yard was not yet<br />

thought of at that time.<br />

By John R. Burke<br />

Henry Ward was station agent at<br />

Auburn in those days, and I succeeded<br />

his son, Kilbourne Ward, as yard<br />

master at Auburn, when he went to<br />

the M.D.T. people at Syracuse.<br />

Coupling Cars at Auburn<br />

In the spring of 1873 I went coupling<br />

cars in Auburn yard with the pin<br />

and link, crooked link and chain link,<br />

and dead blocks, the most dangerous<br />

cars that ever were built. At this<br />

time there were passenger car shops<br />

in Auburn for building and repairing<br />

passenger cars and painting and varnishing<br />

them. The foreman's name<br />

was William Johnson. There also was<br />

a blacksmith shop for mending rails,<br />

as the ends of rails would get battered<br />

down, and then would have to<br />

be taken out and repaired. No steel<br />

rails in those days. Tom Munsell was<br />

boss blacksmith. William B. Munsell,<br />

a son, was pensioned two months ago<br />

in Buffalo, as an engineman. These<br />

shops stood where the freight house<br />

now stands, from Seymour Street to<br />

Chappie Street, and they were built<br />

by the old Auburn & Syracuse Railroad<br />

when John H. Chedell of Auburn<br />

was President. Afterwards consolidation<br />

took place and the line was<br />

called the New York Central.<br />

The Early Passenger Engines<br />

Who is there now that remembers<br />

those passenger engineers of the seventies<br />

that ran over the Auburn road<br />

in the days when I worked with them?<br />

There was Hank Case on engine 194,<br />

John Kinney, fireman; Charley Simonds,<br />

engine 26; Ed Morriott, fire-<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

man; Bill Pike, engines 57 and 61;<br />

Patsy White, fireman; Dave Cambell,<br />

engines 102 and 535; R. Peters,<br />

fireman; Jack Baker, engine 104;<br />

Charley Chapman, fireman, and Mace<br />

Gibson, engine 68; Tommy Crummy,<br />

fireman, who got killed going down<br />

around the "Alps" one night. His<br />

engine struck a big stone that rolled<br />

onto the track, and he got caught in<br />

the gang-way when engine and tender<br />

came together. Then there was Engineer<br />

Belty, engine 154, who went<br />

down in a washout coming into<br />

Geneva one Saturday night, going<br />

west in March, 1873. Belty and his<br />

fireman got killed. I worked at the<br />

wreck the next day.<br />

Some of the Old-Time Enginemen<br />

I remember Engineer Shafer on engine<br />

327; Charley Thomas, engine<br />

112; Leander Wright, engine 103;<br />

Prank Dana, fireman, and Mike Lynn,<br />

extra passenger engineer of Rochester.<br />

Some of the freight engineers that<br />

I knew in those days-and worked with:<br />

Charley H o g a n<br />

(of 999 fame)<br />

then running engine<br />

410; Joe<br />

L i p e and John<br />

Thompson, engine<br />

403; Bob Shannon,<br />

404; Emps<br />

Belden, 405; Tom<br />

Baker, 409; Ed<br />

McGrale (Stone<br />

Wall), 411; Lute<br />

Eldridge, 413;<br />

Bill Cone, 415;<br />

Jimmy Gould,<br />

320; Johnnie Cof­<br />

John R. Burke fee, 323; Dick<br />

Pyles, 299; Cale Cherry, 398; Dick<br />

Bishop, 121; Harry Watkeys, 331;<br />

Jack Mack, fireman; Ben Balbou, 357;<br />

Connie Murphy, 184; Billy Pellynze,<br />

302; Al Pugsley, 353; Billy Owens,<br />

377; Johnnie Cool, 363; Curley Simpson,<br />

344; Billy Emels, 324; Engineer<br />

Bradley, 225.<br />

The first engine that I coupled cars<br />

after was number 107, a wood burner.<br />

Billy Goodwin was engineer. Afterwards<br />

I worked on engines 56, 37<br />

and 130.<br />

The road at this time was going<br />

from wood to coal in the engines, and<br />

wood was being burned in passenger<br />

coach stoves.<br />

On Chicago & North Western<br />

In 1879 I went to the Chicago &<br />

North Western as fireman on the Wisconsin<br />

Division out of Chicago, running<br />

between Chicago and Milwaukee,<br />

Pon du Lac, Oshkosh, Harvard Junction<br />

and Janesville. I was firing three<br />

years and in the spring of 1882 I was<br />

promoted to engineer, and the first<br />

engine I ran was the 284 Mogul road<br />

engine. On December 30, 1884, I<br />

came to the New York, West Shore &<br />

Buffalo as engineer, running between<br />

Buffalo and Syracuse on through<br />

freight. In the spring of 1885 I was<br />

put on through freight between Newark<br />

and Frankfort, a 109-mile run.<br />

In the summer of 1885, I was ordered<br />

to take the pusher engine at<br />

Oneida Castle, and remained there<br />

about eighteen months. I then went<br />

drawing through freight between De-<br />

Witt and Coeymans Junction on the<br />

Mohawk Division. My next run was<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 53<br />

on a pick-up train between Newark<br />

and Frankfort, then I went drawing<br />

the local freight between Newark and<br />

Syracuse, and after some time I went<br />

drawing fast freight and extra passenger<br />

between Buffalo and Syracuse.<br />

When I left this run I took the yard<br />

job at Newark, with passenger relief<br />

work, and in 1892 was given a regular<br />

passenger train out of Buffalo, but I<br />

did, not take it, as I did not want to<br />

live' in Buffalo.<br />

Two Sons Also in Service<br />

In 1914 I was transferred to Lyons<br />

where I remained until I was pensioned<br />

on January 1. I was railroading<br />

fifty-five years and one month,<br />

forty-five years as locomotive engineman.<br />

My father and three brothers<br />

besides myself have worked for the<br />

New York Central, and I have two<br />

boys who are enginemen at the present<br />

time—Earl and Harold Burke,<br />

running out of DeWitt on the Syracuse<br />

Division. My father worked for<br />

the New York Central thirty-five<br />

years, starting in 1848.<br />

In the December number of the<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine<br />

F. A. Chase, Master Mechanic from<br />

1849 to 1910, speaks of Engineer William<br />

Crealman at Rochester whom I<br />

knew, and I have heard my father<br />

speak of the other engineer, Hank<br />

Bailey, whom Mr. Chase speaks of.<br />

He also speaks of a Mr. Tilton, who<br />

worked with him in the Detroit shops.<br />

George W. Tilton was my superintendent<br />

of motive power while I was on<br />

C. & N. W. and was killed as Mr.<br />

Chase says. Mr. Chase also speaks<br />

of a Mr. Boon who was master mechanic<br />

at Adrian, Mich., when he<br />

worked there. I wonder if that is<br />

not pur James M. Boon, who was superintendent<br />

of motive power of the<br />

West Shore, and located at Frankfort,<br />

N. Y., where the main shops were<br />

located? Mr. Boon was at one time<br />

superintendent of motive power of the<br />

Pittsburgh, Fort Wayne & Chicago<br />

Railroad, and afterwards came to the<br />

Chicago & North Western as assistant<br />

superintendent of motive power under<br />

George W. Tilton, and was there when<br />

I was running on that road, and I<br />

considered him a very able man. It<br />

was at Frankfort that I first met<br />

John Howard, who at that time was<br />

assistant round-house foreman under<br />

Joe Johnson, afterwards becoming superintendent<br />

of motive power of the<br />

New York Central, and a man of<br />

whom I thought a great deal.<br />

Engines Named and Numbered<br />

In my early days on the Auburn<br />

branch of the New York Central quite<br />

a number of the engines retained<br />

their names as well as their number.<br />

I remember the John Wilkinson was<br />

No. 100. The General Gould was the<br />

101. The Young America was 53, and<br />

the John H. Chedell, 54. The C. C.<br />

Dennis was the 26 and the Daniel<br />

Drew was No. 11.<br />

I also knew Bill Gould who ran<br />

engine 125, and Jim Wood who ran<br />

engine 110 on the main line. What<br />

two beautiful looking engines they<br />

were! The clappers in their bells<br />

were "case-hardened" and when the<br />

bells were ringing you would be delighted<br />

to listen to them. I would like<br />

to hear such bells again.<br />

Jim Wood was about the nerviest<br />

engineer in his day on the New York<br />

Central. It was he who always drew<br />

Commodore Vanderbilt and his son,<br />

William H. Vanderbilt, when they<br />

came over the road on the Western<br />

Division. He made the run from<br />

Syracuse to Rochester, eighty-one<br />

miles, in eighty-two minutes one time<br />

before the days of any air brakes.<br />

Nowadays it is consoling to the engineman<br />

to know that he has a powerful<br />

and quick-acting air brake at his<br />

left hand.<br />

The smallest engine I ever saw on<br />

the New York Central was No. 12 at<br />

Auburn. She was a wood-burner and<br />

had only one driving wheel on a side,<br />

and she could only handle four or five<br />

cars at a time with only ten tons of<br />

freight in each car. Billy Goodwin<br />

was the engineer and he had to do his<br />

own firing.<br />

And now I come to the half-way<br />

posts on the Auburn road of the New<br />

York Central.<br />

In my early days there were posts<br />

erected near the side of the track halfway<br />

between stations and they were<br />

called the half-way posts with signs<br />

on them reading "Half-Way."<br />

The time-card rule in those days<br />

Froim Here to Montreal<br />

By Henry Stringham<br />

T matters not where "here" may<br />

I be,<br />

It's just a starting place;<br />

And here or there is equally<br />

A valid homing base.<br />

The way lies through a sheer domain<br />

Of ledges crudely piled,<br />

Contrived by energy amain<br />

Athwart a region wild.<br />

A land of terraced spikes of green<br />

With silver interspersed,<br />

Where hilltops totter and careen<br />

Like giants sore athirst<br />

In search of fiery waters where<br />

But sylvan ripples flow,<br />

The Adirondacks bathe in air<br />

That sundown sets aglow.<br />

The Raquettes and the Saranacs,<br />

The Placids and the Clears,<br />

Are spotlights on the tangled tracks<br />

of roving mountaineers,<br />

Till comes in calm comparison<br />

The Salmon River's vale,<br />

Where meet in friendly garrison<br />

The pixies of the trail.<br />

And so from here to Montreal<br />

One travels through these scenes,<br />

And marvels as the rapids fall<br />

Or as a mountain leans.<br />

And when returned to kin and kith,<br />

With hearts devoid of guile,<br />

Why do our cronies greet us with<br />

That queer, suspicious smile?<br />

said that eastbound trains had the<br />

right of road over west-bound trains<br />

until they were fifteen minutes late.<br />

Then if the west-bound train did not<br />

see the east-bound coming, it would<br />

pull out against the other without any<br />

orders whatever, and the train that<br />

got to the half-way post first was the<br />

best man.<br />

The other train had to back up to<br />

the next station. Of course if the<br />

east-bound engineer was running late<br />

he would expect the west-bound pulling<br />

against him, and I have seen the<br />

time where both engineers would see<br />

the other one coming, but would still<br />

keep moving toward the post, and I<br />

have seen where one would beat the<br />

other by the length of his pilot. I<br />

have seen the engineer of the westbound<br />

send a brakeman out on the<br />

front end of the engine, and hold a<br />

coat over the headlight, so that the<br />

other engineer would not see him coming<br />

until he got near the post. There<br />

were no air brakes in those days, all<br />

hand brakes, and in a movement of<br />

this kind every man was at his post,<br />

and I never heard of any accident<br />

happening.<br />

Every Man to His Own Engine<br />

Telegraph offices in those days were<br />

not as close as at the present time,<br />

and it would be from some station<br />

where there was no telegraph office<br />

that such movements would take<br />

place. In the daytime the engineer<br />

would watch for the smoke of the<br />

other fellow, and for his headlight at<br />

night. Back in those days Skaneateles<br />

Junction, Auburn, Cayuga, Geneva,<br />

and Canandaigua were wood stations,<br />

brought there by wood contractors.<br />

Back in those days every engineer<br />

had a regular engine, and no one ran<br />

her but the regular assigned engineer.<br />

There were no injectors in those days<br />

that you could depend on. Every engine<br />

had two pumps, one on each side,<br />

to put water in the boiler when the<br />

engine was moving. Engineers had to<br />

pack their own pistons, valve stems<br />

and pumps, also all cocks in cab, and<br />

take care of the headlight.<br />

I have run under Superintendents<br />

D. B. McCoy, James P. Bradfield, C.<br />

H. Ketchum, F. W. Everett, and M.<br />

E« Walsh. The master mechanics<br />

were T. W. Fredericks, George W.<br />

West, James McBeth, P. E. Garrisson,<br />

and Charley Hogan at Buffalo, and<br />

James M. Boon, and John Howard at<br />

Frankfort on the Mohawk Division.<br />

W. J. Crandall of Rochester, N. Y.,<br />

was my last master mechanic.<br />

In conclusion, I want to say that I<br />

hold the deepest respect and greatest<br />

admiration for the superintendents<br />

and master mechanics under whom it<br />

has been my privilege to work. I always<br />

tried to do the best work that<br />

was in me for the Company. I have<br />

always considered the officials of the<br />

New York Central Railroad to be real<br />

men of the finest type, and I am proud<br />

today to be numbered among those<br />

who form that great family known as<br />

the New York Central Railroad.<br />

I would be pleased to hear from any<br />

of my friends, young and old, at my<br />

home, 317 Colton Avenue, Newark,<br />

Wayne County, N. Y.


54 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

Published monthly by the Department of<br />

Public Relations, Bureau of Publicity,<br />

New York Central Lines<br />

CHARLES C. PAULDING<br />

Vice-President, Public Relations<br />

466 Lexington Avenue<br />

New York City<br />

C.W.Y. CURRIE, Editor<br />

Subscription price : Twenty cents the copy,<br />

or $2.00 per year, delivered postpaid<br />

Advertising rates furnished upon application<br />

Member of the Kellogg Group of Railroad<br />

Employe Publications<br />

Distributed to the 107,000 officers and<br />

employes of the New York Central Lines.<br />

Devoted to the interests of the railroad<br />

workers, their families and home communities,<br />

and to securing the best service for<br />

the public. Contributions are welcome.<br />

Manuscripts and photographs will be returned<br />

upon request.<br />

Vol. IX. May, 1928 No. 2<br />

Chauncey Mitchell Depew<br />

TN the passing of its venerated<br />

Chairman of the Board, the New<br />

York Central Railroad suffers a loss<br />

that is universally felt. At Chauncey<br />

M. Depew's bier the nation and the<br />

world bowed in tribute. Few Americans<br />

have there been whose death has<br />

evoked such spontaneous outpouring<br />

of expressions of sorrow. With them<br />

was mingled appreciation for his long<br />

and useful life.<br />

Mr. Depew, with his culture and<br />

brilliant intellect, his wit and incorrigible<br />

optimism, was regarded by the<br />

rest of the world as embodying in himself<br />

all that was finest in American<br />

life.<br />

The present generation, which knew<br />

him only after he had attained his<br />

unique position as patriarch and sage,<br />

is likely to forget that behind Mr. Depew's<br />

singular charm and wonderfully<br />

winning personality there was a<br />

keen, practical railroad executive.<br />

It was during the period of nearly<br />

thirteen years while Chauncey M.<br />

Depew was President of the New<br />

York Central that several of the most<br />

important steps in the development of<br />

this railroad system were taken.<br />

It was in Mr. Depew's presidency<br />

that the New York Central took over<br />

the Beech Creek Railroad, the Rome,<br />

Watertown & Ogdensburg Railroad,<br />

the Lake Shore & Michigan <strong>Southern</strong><br />

Railroad and the Michigan Central<br />

Railroad, as well as minor roads. It<br />

is obvious that it was during Mr.<br />

Depew's term of office that the foundations<br />

were laid on which the New<br />

York Central Lines have grown to<br />

their present greatness.<br />

When he assumed office in 1885, the<br />

road had only 993 miles of line and<br />

The Power of the Employes<br />

/ N order to make room for a large stock of summer conundrums, the following<br />

problems, which have been used in demonstrations but are not worn so's<br />

you could notice it, are offered at less than half than value. Positively no<br />

alterations, no exchanges, no refunds.<br />

1. Suppose the 1,779,281 railroad employes should each and severally decide<br />

to get out and drum up enough new passenger business to make good the<br />

decrease in such business in 1927 as compared with 1926, how much would<br />

each employe have to get, speaking in averages?<br />

2. Having made a success of passenger solicitation, suppose these hustling<br />

employes should elect to go on and make up the decrease in car loadings for<br />

the first three months of 1928 as compared with the corresponding period of<br />

1927, how many additional car loads would be required?<br />

3. The Committee on Water Service of the American <strong>Railway</strong> Association<br />

estimates that it takes about 500 pounds of coal to stop an average train of,<br />

say 3,500 tons. If each freight train in 1927 had cut out a single unscheduled<br />

stop for each hundred train-miles, how much coal would have been saved?<br />

4. If railroad employes were divided into groups of 1,400 each, and if each<br />

group by its concerted efforts could bring sufficient influence to bear to prevent<br />

the opening of one new grade crossing each year, what would be the effect<br />

on the grade crossing situation?<br />

5. Guess what the capital expenditures of the railroads were for the eight<br />

years ending with 1927.<br />

6. What was the investment of the railroads per employe?<br />

7. What was the average net income per employe?<br />

8. What was the per cent of net income on investment per employe?<br />

9. How does the investment in railroads compare with that in motor vehicles<br />

and hard-surfaced roads for them to run on?<br />

10. Which handles the greater volume of freight: the railroads of the United<br />

States, or all the rest of the railroads in the world?<br />

Of course, if you can answer these questions correctly it will not be necessary<br />

for you to turn to page 100.<br />

earned $24,429,441. The operating<br />

ratio was 66.8. Thirteen years later,<br />

when he laid aside his duties to become<br />

Chairman of the Board, the road<br />

had grown to a total of 2,650 miles of<br />

line, on which the earnings in 1898<br />

were $47,484,632. In spite of the fact<br />

that the average freight rate had declined,<br />

the operating ratio had been<br />

reduced to 64 per cent. Passenger<br />

cars had increased from 492 to 1,188;<br />

freight cars from 24,744 to 42,485 and<br />

floating equipment from 57 craft to<br />

143. The average trainload increased<br />

from 188 tons in 1885 to 304 tons in<br />

1898.<br />

In the death of this distinguished<br />

man who adorned both his profession<br />

and his country, the railroad loses one<br />

of its most sagacious counselors and<br />

the world one of its most serene and<br />

wholesome spirits.<br />

Adventurers<br />

EWSPAPER accounts today are<br />

N preserving in picturesque detail<br />

the stories of the adventurers of the<br />

air who are making transportation<br />

history by their daring attempts to<br />

fly great distances—and heroes these<br />

tales are making of each one of these<br />

men.<br />

A hundred, seventy-five, even forty<br />

years ago, were not the early|railroaders<br />

almost as courageous? Infinitesimal<br />

in comparison were the printed<br />

accounts of their adventures and<br />

achievements. Perhaps few individuals<br />

made as daring moves in railroading-as<br />

the trans-ocean fliers have<br />

made in their field—yet did they know<br />

any more about what was ahead of<br />

them? Many were the dangers, countless<br />

were the hardships of the developmental<br />

years of railroading.<br />

Only those who lived the experiences<br />

can tell us of them in their full detail<br />

today. We revere our veterans,<br />

living and dead, who dared, endured<br />

and loved the early days of railroading,<br />

working diligently, bravely, toward<br />

the safe and comfortable systems<br />

that we have today; looking forward<br />

to even greater luxuries and improvements<br />

tomorrow.<br />

Vacation Travel<br />

IT^ESPITE the fact that the New<br />

^-^ York Central is one of the few<br />

railroads which are maintaining or<br />

increasing long-haul passenger business<br />

at present, additional business<br />

through Traffic Tips is still most desirable.<br />

The coming vacation season will increase<br />

travel over all the country, but<br />

the usual summer gains are by no<br />

means enough to satisfy the New<br />

York Central. The Traffic Department<br />

of this road is seeking new passenger<br />

business to exceed that of any<br />

preceding season.<br />

And what is to be one of the sources<br />

of this new patronage? The Traffic<br />

Tip cards, which are enclosed in every<br />

Magazine and which may also be obtained<br />

from department heads or from<br />

the Traffic Department itself.<br />

Every employe who induces even<br />

one person to use the New York Central<br />

for his vacation trip this summer<br />

is increasing the earnings of his Company<br />

and making his own job more<br />

secure.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 55<br />

H . G . Stevenson B i t t e n b y R a d i o B u g >— He's<br />

G e t t i n g Stations f r o m A M O v e r the W o r l d<br />

'T<strong>TH</strong>ERE really seems to be nothing<br />

•"- that can be done about it. The<br />

radio-bug starting only a few years<br />

ago as a local menace has now become<br />

a matter of national concern. Where<br />

formerly its victims were confined to<br />

those parts of the United States visited<br />

by the hoof-and-mouth disease,<br />

addicts now may be found throughout<br />

the breadth of the country. Yearly<br />

new victims are added, for the bug is<br />

a promiscuous crittur, going here and<br />

there, biting right and left and leaving<br />

in its wake disrupted homes, widows<br />

and orphans.<br />

Winter seems to be the most susceptible<br />

time of the year. A person<br />

may dress ever so warmly, observe<br />

a rigid diet and yet fall a victim to<br />

the ravages of this dreadful and ubiquitous<br />

creature. Even your own<br />

friends may deliberately contaminate<br />

you. It might be said here that the<br />

disease is readily contagious, caught<br />

by the merest contact or conversation,<br />

and absolutely fatal after donning<br />

ear phones once or twice.<br />

The first symptom is a chronic state<br />

of trance on the part of the victim,<br />

medically known as thatdumblook. He<br />

then loses appetite, spends his evenings<br />

and sometimes nights at the<br />

home of similar addicts. Finally,<br />

nothing will satisfy him but a radio<br />

set, and his moral disintegration is<br />

complete. His evenings, once spent<br />

at playing bridge, reading the sports<br />

section, or other elevating pursuits,<br />

are now given over entirely to this<br />

new addiction.<br />

He becomes seclusive, retires to his<br />

radio corner for hours at a time, resents<br />

interruption, especially from<br />

children. Fathers have been known<br />

to kill their offspring, or even their<br />

wives who in the interest of cleanliness<br />

have attempted to "tidy" the<br />

radio set or adjust the wires so that<br />

they look more presentable.<br />

The condition of the radio bug victim<br />

is never static. His conversation<br />

is always rambling with frequent allusions<br />

to "DX," a sort of hallucinary<br />

Nirvana all radio addicts hope some<br />

day to attain, before or after death.<br />

On the subject of conversation, it<br />

might be added that these victims,<br />

while apparently lucid on everyday<br />

topics, become absolutely unintelligible<br />

when discussing their own peculiar<br />

malady.<br />

Take the case of H. G. Stevenson,<br />

243 Belmont Avenue, Oneida, N. Y.<br />

Mr. Stevenson has been for twentysix<br />

years an operator and telegraph<br />

leverman for the New York Central<br />

at various points on the Mohawk Division.<br />

At present he is stationed at<br />

tower SS-YO, Oneida. During working<br />

hours, he is staid, dignified and<br />

thoroughly capable. But after 11<br />

P.M. when he comes home from his<br />

last shift, he is a changed man.<br />

He sits for hours at night bent over<br />

his dials, tuning in and tuning out,<br />

making notations in his log book of<br />

stations received. His family, who<br />

still love him, tried first to isolate the<br />

By Dr. G. E. Woggleson<br />

germ of his radio idea about ten years<br />

ago, and failing in that, decided it<br />

was best to isolate the victim. The<br />

plan works to the<br />

satisfaction of<br />

everybody^ so that<br />

now he has a<br />

room in the rear<br />

of the house<br />

where he may<br />

work undisturbed<br />

and undisturbing.<br />

It was for the<br />

purpose of studying<br />

some special<br />

symptoms of this<br />

case that the writer<br />

made a visit to<br />

the home of Mr.<br />

Stevenson. From<br />

t h e fir<br />

H. G. Stevenson st glint in<br />

his eye when he<br />

took my hand until his farewell, I<br />

recognized Mr. Stevenson's case as<br />

absolutely flagrant. From the trembling<br />

uncertainties of an amateur,<br />

this man has become outspoken, even<br />

unashamed of his radio activities.<br />

While we were sitting talking, Mr.<br />

Stevenson's son came over and listened<br />

in.<br />

"Are you going to study the radio,<br />

like your dad?" he was asked politely.<br />

"No," was his direct answer. He<br />

appeared to be a fine, upstanding<br />

youngster.<br />

For the sake of other physicians<br />

who may be interested in this case, I<br />

am reporting certain answers that Mr.<br />

Stevenson readily gave without any<br />

embarrassment:<br />

"I have a Hartley circuit transmitter,<br />

UX 210 tube, 675 volts, chemically<br />

rectified AC on plate. My vertical<br />

antenna is thirty-five feet with<br />

the counterpoise horizontal eight feet<br />

from ground; it is thirty-five feet<br />

long, same as the antenna.<br />

"I started transmitting with this<br />

set in October, and through February<br />

25 I have worked, that is talked back<br />

and forth, with 256 stations. The<br />

farthest I have worked is Mt. Everett,<br />

Washington. It was done on a good<br />

night with no QRM. Oh, QRM is interference.<br />

"Another time, I got Lang, <strong>Canada</strong>,<br />

about 650 miles above Winnipeg. The<br />

operator said that it was very cold,<br />

although we were having warm<br />

weather here. When there was ice on<br />

the ground here, 4 AEP, a station<br />

below Tampa, Fla., told me that the<br />

operator was finding it very warm<br />

there. 'You ought to be here where<br />

you can skate,' I told him.<br />

" 'Who wants to skate when I can<br />

sit by the open window in my pajamas!'<br />

was his answer.<br />

"O, yes, I have had practical use for<br />

my set. One night I was working<br />

San Antonio, when the operator there<br />

asked me if I knew Dr. Robert<br />

Crockett of Oneida. When I told him<br />

that I did, he replied that he was Dr.<br />

Crockett's son-in-law and asked if I<br />

would take a message from their<br />

daughter. I took the message and<br />

here is a card of thanks from Dr. and<br />

Mrs. Crockett. •<br />

"On the night of the New England<br />

flood, November 4, about 9:30, I received<br />

a QRR, which is the railroad<br />

signal of distress, similar to SOS at<br />

sea. The message said: 'Get in touch<br />

with train dispatcher at White River<br />

Junction. Tell him to hold all trains<br />

on account of bad washout ahead.<br />

Central Vermont Railroad is temporarily<br />

closed.'<br />

"I tried to reach the train dispatcher<br />

as instructed, through Utica, but<br />

learned that the wires were down and<br />

White River Junction was isolated.<br />

We even tried to work through Montreal<br />

and Rotterdam, but everything<br />

was washed out. Still, some good<br />

may have come from our efforts.<br />

"The next morning, about 10 o'clock<br />

came another QRR from Pittsfield,<br />

Mass., with instructions to hold No. 34<br />

on account of a bad washout on the<br />

Boston & Albany. The train was already<br />

overdue, so that I was sure it<br />

had already been stopped.<br />

"Here are some letters acknowledging<br />

my station. This is a pretty good<br />

one (Note: the letter is reproduced<br />

accurately for whatever scientific<br />

value it may have) :<br />

" 'HI HI OM:—Hope you remember<br />

working me. Guess it was November<br />

7 at ABT 9:20 A.M. Central Standard<br />

Time. That rite?<br />

" 'Your signals come in very nice<br />

up here OM. What are you using?<br />

My QRN factory here is two 50-Watt<br />

tubes in a Hartley CKT, QSB: RAG;<br />

plate voltage 1,200 volts A.C.; filament<br />

voltage 11 D.C.; plate current<br />

200 mils; output 2.5 amps; antenna<br />

is 30 feet long, counterpoise 27 feet.<br />

Doing good work wid it too, but not<br />

quite satisfied with the QSB it puts<br />

out, so think I will change it over to<br />

CC before long.<br />

'"Well OM will QRT FR MW.<br />

Hoping we clash AGN some time before<br />

long; always ready to QRS OM.<br />

" 'Best regards ES DX ES luck,<br />

" 'W. A. Dusky, Fort Brady, Sault<br />

Ste. Marie, Mich.<br />

" 'P. S. Don't forget to send me<br />

your card OM—TNX.'<br />

"All right, if you want to I'll show<br />

you some of the work my set does<br />

receiving. Oh, yes, if any New York<br />

Central employe wants advice about<br />

building a set, I'll be glad to help him.<br />

My whole set was home-made.<br />

"I have here a Schull tuner with<br />

Lorenz coils for stations from 15<br />

meters to 300. For longer distance<br />

I use an Anthony regenerator honeycomb<br />

tuner, ranging from 300 to 15,-<br />

000 meters. I have been able to hear<br />

the larger transatlantic stations with<br />

this set, FL in Paris and POZ in Germany.<br />

I'll let you listen in now."<br />

Very carefully, Mr. Stevenson<br />

clapped a pair of ear phones over my<br />

ears and a pair over his, then proceeded<br />

to tune in. Presently, we heard<br />

a series of bell-like buzzes.<br />

"I think that is Manchester, England,"<br />

he announced in a low voice.<br />

"A message for or from Manchester?"<br />

"Uh, huh,—shhhh!" said Mr. Stevenson.


56 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

The imported print from Best & Company,<br />

Fifth Avenue, New York, is typical of the<br />

prints being shown this season at the Paris<br />

displays. The all-over design may have a<br />

background of navy blue, so popular this<br />

spring, of black, beige or green. Note the<br />

skirt pleated this year all the way around,<br />

and the soft bow as a finish for the front of<br />

the blouse.<br />

Photo by Joel Fedcr<br />

The singlette of glove<br />

silk, tailored to fit the<br />

lines of the body, is<br />

recommended both for<br />

sports and dress wear.<br />

Photo by Nicholas Haz<br />

The voluminous coat above is sponsored by<br />

Louiseboulanger and shown by Best & Company,<br />

New York. The material is sablna<br />

cloth, a soft fabric of the homespun variety,<br />

and It comes silk-lined in sandrose, leghorn,<br />

gray and green. The soft felt hat, with band<br />

to match, accented at the top by a lighter,<br />

then a darker stripe, completes the straightforward<br />

simplicity of the outfit.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, I92S 57<br />

Turning the House Into a H o m e In Spring<br />

"AY seems to be the month<br />

when the last of the winter<br />

M is finally over and spring<br />

is here in her full glory. We all feel<br />

the blood stirring in our veins, and<br />

the desire to be up and doing drives<br />

us from one thing to another.<br />

We moderns claim that the annual<br />

spring housecleaning is a thing of the<br />

past, that we keep our houses in such<br />

good order that it is unnecessary. Yet<br />

breathes there a woman, no matter<br />

how poor a housekeeper, who doesn't<br />

feel the old habit assert itself with<br />

the first warm breath of the soft May<br />

air. The longing to clean closets,<br />

shelves, windows and paint becomes a<br />

positive mania. We are absolutely<br />

compelled to indulge in the annual<br />

event and clean house.<br />

Even the most office-bound, manlike<br />

business woman will revert to<br />

type during these May days and, since<br />

she cannot beat a carpet or polish<br />

windows, she cleans out her closet<br />

and bureau drawers. It is really<br />

funny the way we all drop our business<br />

man's attitude and fall back into<br />

the housewife's part at the first whiff<br />

of fragrant May breeze.<br />

Delving for Wearables from Last Year<br />

How we hope against hope, as we<br />

delve into the depths of trunks and<br />

closets and drag forth our last season's<br />

frocks, which looked so worn<br />

and weary when we put them away<br />

but which we always trust will be rejuvenated<br />

by the winter's hibernating.<br />

But, somehow, they usually look<br />

worse, rather than better. We begin<br />

then to read madly all those helpful<br />

hints as how to combine two last year's<br />

frocks to make one this year's frock,<br />

knowing perfectly well that it is a<br />

hopeless task for every one of our<br />

friends would recognize the skirt of<br />

this if combined with the top of that,<br />

so we finally do the sensible thing and<br />

wear "as is" the things that are presentable<br />

and junk the things that are<br />

not.<br />

It is an awfully hard thing to do, to<br />

throw away some dress that perhaps<br />

could be dyed, remade and worn. Now,<br />

in my opinion, this dyeing of a dress<br />

after it has lived a long and useful<br />

life is really unkind. It is adding insult<br />

to injury. WTry not let it go its<br />

way without dyeing the poor thing?<br />

Only about one dress in a hundred can<br />

bo dyed successfully. I realize that<br />

there are those who do have the most<br />

By Carla Ryder<br />

wonderful luck in changing the complexion<br />

of their entire wardrobe from<br />

season to season by the simple process<br />

of dipping or dyeing. They claim that<br />

they can dye a frock any color from<br />

a faint, delicate mauve to a deep and<br />

enduring black—and they can! In<br />

fact I have such a friend, and she fills<br />

me with envy when she appears in<br />

what I take to be a brand new frock,<br />

but which is merely dyed.<br />

If you must dye, send whatever you<br />

have to some responsible place and<br />

take a sporting chance—it's about a<br />

fifty-fifty bet. Since starting this, I<br />

have just had returned to me two gar-<br />

For the morning manoeuvres, an exercise<br />

suit from Best's designed for<br />

home wear, but attractive enough to<br />

wear at the beach.<br />

ments that in a rash moment I took<br />

to the dyer's. To tell the truth, I<br />

actually hated to call for them but<br />

finally did, and the results are exactly<br />

what I predicted. One of them is<br />

wearable, though I shall always feel<br />

that everyone whom I meet will say,<br />

"Dyed, poor thing." But the other<br />

is a complete loss, not only is it dyed,<br />

but the only place for it now is to be<br />

buried.<br />

This year it is really rather easy<br />

to make new out of old frocks, for as<br />

never before there are all manner of<br />

combinations that are unusually<br />

smart. For example, take a last season's<br />

party dress, with its even hem,<br />

and by adding a fluttering jabot of<br />

either the same, or a different color,<br />

with the ends almost on the floor, and<br />

you have an absolutely new effect. I<br />

saw a lovely lace dress the other day<br />

which gave me an idea of how to rehabilitate<br />

a last year's frock. This<br />

was quite a simple dress of a very<br />

dark brown lace over a lovely ivory<br />

tulle, and the only unevenness of hem<br />

was made by a jabot of green chiffon<br />

caught on one side of the skirt and<br />

hung to touch the floor. This suggests<br />

what may be done to some little<br />

frock to make it a 1928 model, whereas<br />

otherwise it might stay in the closet.<br />

Rejuvenating House as Well as Clothes<br />

Perhaps our houses as well as our<br />

clothes need rejuvenating this spring.<br />

Perhaps they need changes which will<br />

make of them real homes.<br />

Why not, after you have done all<br />

the cleaning of windows and woodwork<br />

that you think is necessary for<br />

the benefit of your house, give it a<br />

good thorough looking over? It's a<br />

queer thing, but you know your house<br />

and your home are two quite different<br />

things. Many houses are not and<br />

could never be homes. It is the home<br />

that counts, in the community where<br />

you live and in the country. It's this<br />

that we have drifted away from. All<br />

this divorce question which is ever before<br />

us is really a matter of homes<br />

and home life.<br />

I sometimes visit in a perfectly<br />

charming house, where there is everything<br />

for your comfort, physical and<br />

mental. Never a bit of dust anywhere,<br />

never a book out of place, all<br />

the chairs the most comfortable that<br />

money can buy, yet you never feel one<br />

bit comfortable in that house. It is<br />

not a real home, but rather a well-run<br />

club. You know it is possible to have<br />

too much order. I would prefer to see


58 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

a hat thrown down perhaps carelessly,<br />

and have my son come home glad to<br />

see me, than to have the hat put carefully<br />

away each time and miss his<br />

cheery hello.<br />

It is the little adjustment that<br />

makes the difference between a house<br />

and a home. Look your house over<br />

carefully and find out whether it is a<br />

home. Can't you make a change here<br />

and there? A new cretonne covering<br />

on some old chair brightens the whole<br />

room. Give the shabby table a coat of<br />

paint. Remember, that almost any<br />

man loves to be turned loose with a<br />

paint brush, in fact, when once started,<br />

it is hard to curb his desire, but<br />

even so, it is worth while, for every<br />

man likes to have a personal interest<br />

in his home. You know, the more you<br />

put into a place the more you love it<br />

and the more it becomes yours together.<br />

Redecorating House Brings New Joys<br />

If you are tired of your surroundings<br />

and it is impossible for you to go<br />

away, why not change your surroundings?<br />

It is done so easily and with so<br />

little expense!<br />

A different color scheme in your<br />

bedroom will make you happy all summer,<br />

or if you hate the dining-room<br />

rug, take it up. It is much cooler not<br />

to have a rug in the summer anyway.<br />

Oh, there are so many ways to make<br />

a home out of a house, and it's so<br />

much fun to do it! Just try a wee<br />

bit of a change and watch the faces<br />

of your family when they come home.<br />

You will find it worth your time and<br />

trouble.<br />

About the biggest job in the world<br />

is to make a real home. Why women<br />

have gone wild over this economic<br />

equality makes me tired. It is not a<br />

small thing to make a home. Any<br />

servant can keep house, but a home is<br />

a different matter, and to run it in a<br />

truly efficient way, planning meals<br />

properly, with a view to the needs of<br />

each member of the family, is in itself<br />

a real job. Then, in addition to the<br />

actual mechanical labor, comes the<br />

underlying "something" that is hard<br />

to explain but without which the home<br />

simply isn't, this something that<br />

makes the difference between just an<br />

ordinary house and a real home.<br />

I was in a house the other day, and<br />

the first thing that struck me was<br />

that it was not loved. The poor thing<br />

was spotless, but it seemed like an<br />

orphan child, not absolutely unhappy,<br />

but unloved. No one had given it<br />

those little personal touches that are<br />

always evident where the housekeeper<br />

is a home-maker. That house was a<br />

place to exist in, not a home really to<br />

live in.<br />

All this talk about the house versus<br />

the home seems to lead quite logically<br />

to brides. I was so glad to receive<br />

this letter:<br />

If there, are any suggestions that<br />

anyone would like to make, please<br />

know that I am only too glad to<br />

have them. After all, these pages<br />

are yours, and it is up to you to<br />

help to make them interesting, so<br />

why not everyone tell me what<br />

they would like to have talked<br />

about? —Carlo Ryder.<br />

"I expect to be married in June.<br />

Can you give me some suggestions for<br />

my trousseau? It must be simple but<br />

I do want nice things."<br />

—Sally B.<br />

I wish I knew a little more about<br />

what you already had, but I suppose<br />

that you probably have all you want<br />

for lingerie. Such things can be so<br />

easily picked up during the winter<br />

sales, though just the other day I<br />

saw some charming underthings for<br />

around four dollars. These were a<br />

very fair quality and would stand<br />

washing. By the way, I suppose you<br />

have heard that linen and cotton lingerie<br />

is considered quite the mode at<br />

the present, but I must say I think<br />

that crepe de chine and silk are cooler<br />

for summer, and they wear about as<br />

well. If I were you I would not indulge<br />

in too bright colors. They always<br />

fade and are apt to show when<br />

they aren't meant to.<br />

Coat, Hats and Dresses for the Bride<br />

If you have a smart coat of some<br />

neutral shade that can be worn with<br />

any color dress you are fixed as to<br />

wraps. Use this with one of those<br />

lovely prints for your traveling (those<br />

prints are especially good for the<br />

train as they do not seem to muss as<br />

easily as a plain material). Then by<br />

having a more dressy frock of chiffon<br />

or crepe de chine you are all right for<br />

dresses, though you will need a sport<br />

suit or two. One skirt that may be<br />

worn with different jersey or silk<br />

blouses will give you several outfits.<br />

Then, if you have a small felt hat for<br />

traveling and sports, all you need is a<br />

larger one to wear with your chiffon<br />

afternoon frock.<br />

You really do not need so many<br />

clothes, for with a coat which may be<br />

utilized for dressy and sports wear<br />

you then can have a variety of combinations,<br />

only be sure that you choose<br />

colors that blend, then you will be<br />

sure always to look smart.<br />

A Move in Time<br />

Augustus-—I'm not fond of the<br />

stage, Violet, but I hear your father<br />

on the stairs, and I think I had better<br />

be going before the footlights.<br />

Making it Easy to Wash the<br />

Hands<br />

CHILDREN should early be taught<br />

the great importance of having<br />

clean hands. To prevent the conveyance<br />

of disease germs to the mouth<br />

and nose, the hands, which handle<br />

so many things, should be washed immediately<br />

after each visit to the toilet,<br />

after using a handkerchief, before<br />

eating, and before handling any kind<br />

of foodstuffs.<br />

Making it easy for children to wash<br />

their hands often is of more avail<br />

than much talking and urging. Water,<br />

basin or bowl, soap, towels and<br />

brushes should all be easily accessible.<br />

If the bowl or washstand is too high<br />

for the wee members of the household,<br />

a hassock, stool or box should be<br />

kept underneath to be pulled out when<br />

the child needs it to stand upon. Remember<br />

it is not pleasant to wash<br />

hands, with water running down the<br />

arms as is the case when the bowl or<br />

basin is too much elevated for the<br />

user.<br />

Pure, mild soap should be provided<br />

and children should be taught to use<br />

it freely, also to rinse the skin well<br />

after washing with the soap. Soap in<br />

fancy or pleasing forms such as soap<br />

babies, animals, flowers, etc., will often<br />

prove an inducement to cleanliness.<br />

In selecting soaps in fancy forms care<br />

must be exercised not to overlook<br />

quality.<br />

Children should have their own<br />

towels and washcloths. These should<br />

be made of soft materials and should<br />

be suited in size to the young users'<br />

small and inexperienced hands. Old<br />

knitted underwear is fine for washcloths.<br />

Several thicknesses of lace or<br />

net from discarded curtains alsj<br />

make good ones. A bit of appealing<br />

embroidery, such as quaint animals<br />

in outline or cross-stitch, makes towels<br />

more interesting and the handwashing<br />

process more appealing. Children<br />

should be taught to hang up their<br />

washcloths and towels after using<br />

them, a suitable place being provided.<br />

To Remove Perspiration Stains<br />

(/GARMENTS that are stained by<br />

perspiration, or otherwise, shouH<br />

never be put to soak in hot soapy<br />

water. This merely serves to set thi<br />

perspiration stains and renders their<br />

ultimate removal difficult and often<br />

impossible. Soak such stained garments<br />

in lukewarm water which contains<br />

no trace of soap. A few drops<br />

of ammonia will serve to neutralize<br />

both the odor and the discoloration.<br />

After being soaked thus for at least<br />

two hours the stains should yield readily<br />

to hot suds and rubbing; if any<br />

traces still remain an immersion in<br />

the boiler should remove them.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 59<br />

New Lamp Shades to Be Made for Old Lamps<br />

By Dorothy Wright<br />

EAUTIFUL lamp shades add so<br />

B much charm to a room that one<br />

can no longer consider.them merely a<br />

convenience. And to be kept truly<br />

smart, lamp shades must be changed<br />

often—the heavily fringed and draped<br />

shades of a few years ago have been<br />

forced to give place to more pleasing<br />

designs in parchment. But even these<br />

change each year in design and deccration.<br />

It is very easy, however, to have<br />

new designs now, for one may easily<br />

decorate the plain, parchment paper<br />

shades at home. These may be had<br />

either pleated, or in straight designs,<br />

and while it is often difficult to buy<br />

a lamp shade ready-made that has<br />

exactly the right color and design for<br />

the place it is to occupy, it is always<br />

possible to decorate a shade that will<br />

lit perfectly into its surroundings.<br />

The designs that are seen on many<br />

of the lamp shades that look like hand<br />

painting are really not hand painted,<br />

but are really "scissor painted." That<br />

is, a design is first selected from one<br />

of the many subjects available in<br />

decorated crepe paper, and then it is<br />

carefully cut out, and after brushing<br />

the shade with paint (made from sealing<br />

wax) the design is pasted in place.<br />

Crepe paper designs may be had in old<br />

galley ships, flowers, autumn leaves,<br />

birds, kiddie designs, and many others,<br />

all in fresh clear colors that will<br />

have the appearance of real paintings<br />

when the final touch is given to them.<br />

The plain parchment paper shades<br />

may be purchased in many sizes and<br />

shapes, and the pleated ones come already<br />

pleated, and ready to be decorated.<br />

These plain shades are most<br />

satisfactory for scissor painting.<br />

To do scissor painting does not<br />

require a knowledge either of painting<br />

or drawing. It is something that an<br />

inexperienced person can do very<br />

easily.<br />

To make sealing wax paint, select<br />

the colors of sealing wax as near the<br />

colors in the crepe paper design as<br />

Enclosed find ten cents for which send me. postpaid,<br />

instructions for making a variety of lamp shades.<br />

A scissor painted pleated shade, which<br />

can be made at home.<br />

possible, and have a separate container<br />

for each color. Break the wax into<br />

small pieces, cover with denatured alcohol,<br />

make air-tight, and allow to<br />

stand from twelve to twenty-four<br />

hours, until it is dissolved. In addition<br />

to the colors, there must be soma<br />

paint made of the transparent amber<br />

sealing wax for the first coating,<br />

which should be very thin, like a thin<br />

syrup. The color for the background<br />

must be carefully chosen to blend with<br />

the colors in the design. The background<br />

paint should be about the consistency<br />

of cream. If the paint is too<br />

thick it may be thinned with the alcohol,<br />

or it may be thickened by removing<br />

the cover so the alcohol will<br />

evaporate.<br />

If you choose a pleated shade,<br />

stretch it out flat on a board and<br />

fasten it with thumb tacks. The plain<br />

shades are easily handled when standing<br />

on a table in front of the worker.<br />

Whichever you choose the work is the<br />

USE <strong>TH</strong>IS COUPON TO ORDER INSTRUCTION PACKET ON LAMP SHADES<br />

a packet containing special<br />

Street No |<br />

City State.<br />

Mail all orders to New York Central Lines Magazine, Department 528, 466 Lexington<br />

Avenue, New York, N. Y.<br />

I<br />

same. Brush the entire shade with a<br />

thin solution of transparent amber<br />

wax. When dry, brush over the shade,<br />

where the design will be, with glue-not<br />

over the back of the cut-out—and<br />

fasten the cut-out in place. Use a<br />

piece of tissue paper over the design<br />

so the fingers will not come in direct<br />

contact with the colored crepe paper.<br />

When a colored background is desired,<br />

saturate a piece of cheese cloth<br />

with alcohol, then dip it into the colored<br />

paint and rub it over the part of<br />

the shade that is exposed, but not over<br />

the design. Several colors may be<br />

blended in this way until the desired<br />

effect is obtained. If a deeper, or<br />

brighter coloring is desired, both sides<br />

of the shade may be tinted.<br />

To make the colors in the design<br />

more vivid, apply the corresponding<br />

colors in the wax paint, with a small<br />

brush. When the surface is entirely<br />

dry, apply a finishing coat of thick<br />

amber sealing wax paint to the entire<br />

outside surface.<br />

The Clothes-pin in a New Role<br />

r<br />

HILE most of us know the value<br />

of the clothes-pin on wash day<br />

yet it is doubtful if many housewives<br />

think of it as an aid in the daily routine<br />

of kitchen work. One housekeeper,<br />

however, who has been more<br />

alert to its latent possibilities than<br />

most of us, has found out the following<br />

uses for it:<br />

A clothes-pin is the best thing for<br />

scraping an aluminum pan, when<br />

scraping becomes necessary, since it<br />

leaves no disfiguring scratches and<br />

marks.<br />

When the glass stopper in the vinegar<br />

cruet sticks a clothes-pin makes a<br />

good handy wrench to remove it.<br />

A clothes-pin is just the thing to<br />

A parchment shade with pattern of<br />

crepe paper made to match the base.


loosen the metal stopper of the hotwater<br />

bottle which refuses to be<br />

turned by hand.<br />

A clothes-pin also comes in handy<br />

for turning the key when a box of<br />

sardines is being opened.<br />

When the cap of the oil can makes<br />

up its mind to be balky and stick like<br />

glue, the ever-helpful clothes-pin can<br />

persuade it to change its mind.<br />

A handful of clothes-pins and a<br />

little direction will amuse the little<br />

children and keep them happily out<br />

from under a busy mother's feet while<br />

the activities of the kitchen are progressing.<br />

Increased length of life is assured<br />

to clothes-pins if the housewife puts<br />

them, when new, into a bucket and<br />

covers them with boiling water to<br />

which a little washing soda has been<br />

added, lets them soak for about half<br />

an hour, rinses them in cold water,<br />

and dries them in the sun.<br />

Caring for Rugs and Carpets<br />

MALL rugs should not be subjected<br />

S to a beating on the clothesline, or<br />

to unusually hard shaking. They may<br />

be cleaned better by being placed, right<br />

side down, on the grass and then<br />

beaten with a flat carpet-beater.<br />

Sweep off the surface dust which the<br />

beater has liberated, turn the rug<br />

right side up and sweep well. This<br />

is a more effective method of cleaning<br />

small rugs and is not so hard on them.<br />

Rag rugs when soiled can be washed<br />

in the machine and will then look<br />

fresh and new. A good way to rinse<br />

them is to hang them on the line and<br />

turn the garden hose upon them, leaving<br />

them to drip dry.<br />

Small rugs may also be scrubbed<br />

with soap and water. Scrubbing brush<br />

and brooms are used by some housewives<br />

for the rug-scrubbing process.<br />

To scrub a small rug lay it on a flat<br />

surface and scrub with hot soapsuds,<br />

rinsing with a cloth wrung out of<br />

clear water. Braided rag rugs which<br />

are too large and clumsy for the machine<br />

may be washed in this way.<br />

If you are afraid that moths may be<br />

harboring in any part of your carpets<br />

or rugs spread a wet towel smoothly<br />

over the place under suspicion and<br />

iron over it with a hot iron. Apply<br />

plenty of heat and the steam will kill<br />

the moth. If heavy furniture which<br />

is seldom moved sits on the carpet or<br />

rug, pay special attention occasionally<br />

to such places since moths are prone to<br />

select them as their breeding pens.<br />

Turpentine applied to carpets where<br />

moths are harbored also has the good<br />

effect of routing them.<br />

Small rugs, whose binding has become<br />

frayed, may best be fixed by use<br />

of the sewing machine. They may be<br />

entirely rebound, if necessary, or the<br />

loosened binding may be stitched firmly<br />

in place again.<br />

When carpets rip along the seams<br />

turn them over on the wrong side and<br />

overcast with heavy thread, pulling<br />

the two edges well together.<br />

Ingrain carpets that have worn thin<br />

in spots may be saved from going into<br />

holes for a while by close darning with<br />

heavy carpet yarn of matching color.<br />

It is best to darn in the backing first<br />

by running the threaded needle<br />

through the backing threads of the<br />

carpet, on the wrong side, and after<br />

the material is thus strengthened and<br />

re-inforced, to darn in a pattern on<br />

the right side by simulating the design<br />

of the carpet.<br />

Carpets and rugs should be turned<br />

about and changed occasionally so as<br />

to distribute hard wear. Small rugs<br />

laid over carpets where there is unusually<br />

hard wear will help to lengthen<br />

the life of the carpet, as well as to<br />

minimize the cleaning.<br />

Do not cut a rug to admit of attaching<br />

an electric light cord. The cord<br />

for the living-room table light or the<br />

dining-room toaster can be passed<br />

through the rug in this wise without<br />

ruining the rug: With an ice pick<br />

carefully separate the heavy threads<br />

in the back of your rug at the place<br />

where the wire must go through. Enlarge<br />

the small hole which the sharp<br />

point will soon make until it is big<br />

enough to pass the cord through. This<br />

can be done without breaking a thread.<br />

The threads will close in around the<br />

cord while it remains in the opening.<br />

When the cord is removed from the<br />

opening in the carpet the threads can<br />

easily be pushed back into place by the<br />

fingers and the hole will have disappeared.<br />

Fruit and Vegetable Candies<br />

A L<strong>TH</strong>OUGH we do not usually<br />

think of fruits and vegetables as<br />

having candy possibilities, still there<br />

are many clever ways to use both in<br />

confections which are delicious and<br />

healthful.<br />

Pineapple Fudge<br />

Cook together until it spins a thread<br />

the following: Two cups granulated<br />

sugar, one-half cup corn syrup, onehalf<br />

cup water and one-fourth teaspoon<br />

cream of tartar. Have ready<br />

one-half cup each of chopped candied<br />

pineapple and walnut meats. Beat<br />

the whites of two eggs until stiff and<br />

dry. Turn the boiling syrup over the<br />

whites of the eggs, continuing to beat<br />

all the time, until the mixture is<br />

creamy and cold, beating in the<br />

chopped pineapple and nut meats soon<br />

after the syrup is added to the eggs.<br />

Candy Roly Poly<br />

Cut finely half a pint of citron, half<br />

a pint of seedless raisins, half a pound<br />

of figs. Have ready blanched a quarter<br />

of a pound of shelled almonds and<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

a pint of shelled peanuts. Put into a<br />

saucepan two pounds of granulated<br />

sugar slightly moistened with a little<br />

vinegar, just enough to start the<br />

sugar melting. Heat slowly and boil<br />

until it hardens slightly when dropped<br />

into cold water. Do not allow to boil<br />

till it gets to the brittle stage. Beat<br />

the mixture for a few moments, then<br />

beat in the mixed chopped fruits and<br />

nuts. After it has cooled off somewhat<br />

pour into a wet cloth and roll<br />

like a pudding, twisting the ends of<br />

the cloth to keep it in roll shape.<br />

After it is cold slice it down in pieces<br />

as needed.<br />

Peach Leather<br />

Stew a pound of peaches, pared and<br />

halved, adding a quarter of a pound<br />

of granulated sugar. Mash the<br />

peaches and sugar finely and cook<br />

until quite smooth, and not too juicy.<br />

Pour out on buttered pan and set in<br />

the sun to dry. When dry the fruit<br />

mass can be rolled up like leather.<br />

Cut crosswise to serve. This is a<br />

sweetmeat which our grandmothers<br />

used to make and is»especially wholesome<br />

for children.<br />

Orange Drops<br />

Extract the juice and grate the rind<br />

of one large orange. Remove seeds<br />

and combine the two. Stir in enough<br />

confectioners' sugar to make the mixture<br />

stiff enough to form into small<br />

balls. Leave the candy in balls or<br />

flatten out by pressing slightly with<br />

a knife.<br />

Strawberry Candy<br />

To one pound of strawberries add<br />

one-half pound granulated sugar and<br />

allow to stand over night. In the<br />

morning boil the mixture until the<br />

berries are clear. Spread out thinly<br />

on a platter and dry in the sun, stirring<br />

about occasionally. Most of the<br />

juice will be absorbed into the berries,<br />

which will swell up quite round and<br />

plump. Then roll the berries in granulated<br />

sugar for serving.<br />

Carrot Candy<br />

Put into a saucepan one and onehalf<br />

cups of grated carrot, one and<br />

one-half cups of granulated sugar and<br />

one-half cup of water. Cook until it<br />

is thick like a preserve. In another<br />

pan, while the above mixture is cooling,<br />

cook to a soft ball stage two cups<br />

granulated sugar and one-half cup of<br />

water. Take from the fire, flavor<br />

with vanilla or lemon, and add the<br />

cooled carrot mixture. Return to the<br />

fire and cook again to the soft ball<br />

stage, then beat as it cools until the<br />

mixture looks rich and creamy. Pour<br />

into buttered pans and when cooled,<br />

cut into blocks.<br />

Raisin Penuche<br />

Have melted in a pan two table-<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 61<br />

spoons of butter. Add to this two cups<br />

of light brown sugar, one cup of white<br />

sugar, one cup of milk or cream and<br />

a pinch of soda. Heat slowly until<br />

sugar is dissolved, stirring to prevent<br />

scorching. Cook until candy makes<br />

a firm ball when tried in cold water.<br />

Take from the fire and stir in one<br />

heaping tablespoon of marshmallow<br />

cream. Set aside in the pan to cool<br />

and then add one-fourth teaspoon salt<br />

"and one teaspoon vanilla. Beat well<br />

with a spoon until thick and creamy.<br />

Have ready one-half cup of chopped,<br />

seedless or seeded raisins and one-half<br />

cup of coarsely chopped nut meats.<br />

Knead or work the nuts and raisins<br />

into the candy and press the mixture<br />

into buttered pans. Cut into squares.<br />

Potato Candy-<br />

Put through a sieve enough freshly<br />

boiled hot potato to make a cupful.<br />

Stir in two pounds of confectioner's<br />

sugar. The candy should have the<br />

consistency of pie dough and should<br />

be firm enough to roll. If not of this<br />

consistency add more sugar. From<br />

this all kinds of delicious and different<br />

sweets may be fashioned. A piece of<br />

the candy dough may be spread with<br />

peanut butter or raspberry jam and<br />

then rolled like a jelly roll and sliced.<br />

Flavors and colorings of various kinds<br />

may be used in the candy dough which<br />

may be shaped into balls or cut into<br />

fancy shapes with small cutters. Delicious<br />

chocolate creams can be made<br />

by coating the balls with hot chocolate.<br />

Nut meats make a fine combination<br />

with potato candy. They may be<br />

ground fine and mixed into the dough<br />

or they may be left whole and garnish<br />

the tops. Firm, small fruits, such as<br />

Malaga grapes, may be encased in the<br />

candy dough, as may also slices of<br />

larger fruits such as ripe peaches.<br />

This candy also makes a fine filling<br />

for dates. It may be colored, too, if<br />

it is desired to use it for carrying out<br />

any particular color scheme.<br />

Left-over Egg Yolks<br />

When egg yolks are left over, cover<br />

them with milk before setting in the<br />

refrigerator. They will keep nicely<br />

this way instead of getting hard as<br />

they otherwise would.<br />

JpOR a pattern of either of the<br />

above styles, send fifteen cents<br />

in stamps or coin to the Fashion<br />

Bureau, New York Central Lines<br />

Magazine, 22 East Eighteenth<br />

Street, New York, N. Y. Enclose<br />

ten cents additional if yoif wish a<br />

copy of Fashion Magazine.<br />

C * vlJ<br />

Fashionable Costumes to Make at Home<br />

DESIGN No. 3066 — ATTRACTIVE<br />

MORNING OR PORCH DRESS. Checked<br />

rayon crepe is the medium chosen for this slenderizing<br />

model for the busy housewife. The<br />

reversible fronts have attached tie strings that<br />

slip through bound openings and tie in youthful<br />

bow at back. It may also be made with long<br />

sleeves gathered into narrow cuff bands. It is<br />

very effective made of orchid linen with piping<br />

in purple of self-fabric, printed linen; in tiny<br />

checked gingham in nile green; flowered dimity,<br />

pale blue cotton broadcloth with sateen finish,<br />

or daffodil yellow shantung. The pattern comes<br />

in sizes 16 and 18 years, and 36, 38, 40, 42,<br />

44, 46 and 48 inches bust measure.<br />

DESIGN No. 3404—A SMART DRAPE<br />

ON A PRINT FOR AFTERNOON WEAR.<br />

The jabot frill of the bodice combines with<br />

circular inset of skirt, which is topped by a<br />

stitched tab and buckle, to give delightful expression<br />

of the more feminine mode. It is<br />

slender, youthful, and ever so wearable, fashioned<br />

of printed silk crepe, figured chiffon,<br />

crepe satin, sheer woolen, flat silk crepe, or<br />

Celanese chiffon voile. The patterns for this<br />

attractive model, which is easily made, may be<br />

had in sizes 16 and 18 years, and 36, 38, 40, and<br />

42 inches bust measure. For the 36-inch size,<br />

it can be made with three and one-half yards<br />

of 40-inch material.<br />

The Summer Fashion Magazine, just off the press, shows styles for<br />

woman, the miss and the kiddies, tells what the stout and short woman should<br />

wear, and gives valuable articles about vacation trips. Send ten cents today<br />

for your copy, addressing the Fashion Department.


\ York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 63<br />

s as<br />

Engines<br />

No. of Times<br />

m 8 SB<br />

- -P S e 8<br />

£<br />

- 2 2 5 s -gu IS ° • © -s8<br />

a l l I s » s 'a- £i Ssi<br />

a s us » £ o o s t = h B- s a Z- «;H<br />

z -- - - b i. fc « s. a a. a a a. --"TVkalb Philadelphia 5 — 9.4 — 4 0 1 Proper Bisnett<br />

ONTARIO DIVISION<br />

M.n 9 7 3139 W. Dickhout D.Wells Richland Watertown 9 — 7.0 — 5 0 1 Good Thiebeau<br />

13 70 3457 A. Hicks F. Fuller Watertown Richland 17 — 5.3 — 5 0 1 Good Sandle<br />

19 337 2160 G. Ebert D. Wood Syracuse Oswego 4 — 9.6 — 7 0 0 Good Mahan<br />

21 7 3130 O. Teelin N. Crouch Richland Watertown 8 — 5.6 — 4 0 0 Good Sandle<br />

27 11 3187 M. Hurley R. Weyneth Syracuse Richland 5 — 6.52 — 7 0 0 Good Thiebeau<br />

29 7 3132 O. Teelin N. Crouch Richland Watertown 1 1 — 5.69 — 4 0 1 Good Sandle<br />

29 53 784 G. Holman F. Hogan Lyndonville Charlotte 3 — 14.3 — 9 0 0 Good Mahan<br />

PENNSYLVANIA DIVISION<br />

M.n 23 Ex 5134 R. A. Hodgens W.Hoover Clearfield Keating — 6238 — 27.7 8 0 0 Good Ferguson<br />

29 Ex 5188 J.Bowles W. Fish Corning Newberry Jet. — 1800 — 81.6 7 0 0 Good Larder<br />

WESTERN DIVISION<br />

Feb. 24 64 3174 G. E. Shults F. Hammond Chicago Elkhart 9 — 5.4 — 6 2 0 Good Vaniman<br />

28 64 3009 C. N. Myers G. A. Brown Chicago Elkhart 9 — 4.5 — 5 1 1 Good Vaniman<br />

MICHIGAN DIVISION<br />

Mar. 23 17 914 A. Weathernot C. Trantman Grand Rapids Elkhart 6 — 16.6 — 8 2 1 Good Gorsuch<br />

ILLINOIS DIVISION<br />

Mar 15 11 4714 L. Walge E.R.Bingham Chicago Danville 5 — 13.3 — 6 0 0 Proper Peppet<br />

14 4714 J. W. Hall H. D. Murphy Danville Chicago 3 — 20.2 — 8 0 1 Proper Peppet<br />

OHIO CENTRAL LINES<br />

Mar. 1 16 9576 E. Stoffel D. Davis St. Marys Columbus 2 — 24.9 — 5 0 2 Proper Flickinger<br />

1 5 2084 Morgan Burris N. Lexington Columbus 4 — 13.4 — 4 0 0 Proper Jones<br />

12 3 1989 W. Lynch L. Roush Charleston Hobson 3 — 12. — 4 0 2 Good Ervin<br />

12 4 2071 L. Fulcher L. Caruthers Corning Hobson 4 — 10.3 — 2 0 2 Good Smith<br />

12 17 4759 Woodworth Davis Columbus St. Marys 2 — 23.4 — 6 0 4 Proper Flickinger<br />

14 17 4759 Woodworth Davis Columbus St. Marys 2 — 29.2 — 6 3 3 Proper Flickinger<br />

19 3 2071 M. J. McCarty F. Mourning Charleston Hobson 3 — 12.4 — 3 0 2 Good Ervin<br />

21 23 4757 J. M. Kenney G. Morehead Clemons Bucyrus 2 — 14. — 4 0 0 Proper Rowland<br />

28 5 2071 D. A. Howell J. Fauber Charleston Hobson 4 — 10.5 — 4 0 0 Good Smith<br />

Time Teleg:<br />

is Eulogized<br />

r at<br />

HpHE passing of David Roberts, pen- wrote the Daily Examiner of Bellesioned<br />

telegraph operator at Rushfontaine, Ohio.<br />

sylvania, Ohio, evoked more than cas­ Part of the letter is quoted:<br />

ual expressions of regret. The Big "Thirty months ago, on the steps of<br />

Pour man who had served his railroad his home, Uncle Dave and I said<br />

in that capacity for thirty years left goodbye. We believed then it was<br />

his impression on a score of young the last time, and now we know it.<br />

men who worked under him as student When Superintendent T. J. Hayes of<br />

operators. Wellington Pegg, Princi­ the Cleveland Division of the Big<br />

pal of the Wenatchee High School, in Four, telegraphed the word that David<br />

Ihe state of Washington, expressed Roberts was with us no more, I knew<br />

the feeling of many in a letter he that manv another man beside myself<br />

was touched keenly with grief. The<br />

wires that had so many years carried<br />

their signals from the tips of his<br />

fingers now bore their last message<br />

about him.<br />

"Through all of the years that I<br />

watched him, much of the time in intimate<br />

association, I can say that I<br />

never knew him to fail in any obligation<br />

to his public or to his company.<br />

"This wonderful example he taught<br />

his school—for I call him a teacher.<br />

He did not know he was, I suppose,<br />

and I reckon he would disclaim any<br />

such rank. He didn't lecture. He<br />

didn't preach. I can't remember that<br />

he ever scolded. He taught by exam-


64 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

What the Line East Has Done in Fuel<br />

Conservation<br />

PASSENGER KIIKIUHT<br />

I 1 •'.-•I. 1111,11 l • 1 J , 1 w • • | It 1 I \ I I<br />

• , m I a 4i 4J<br />

" - - 7s — -<br />

- = - = = - : .:<br />

•! 4> fcO —<br />

! is it js . i% !| -A M i\ 1| .„ i "<br />

I a<br />

S<br />

JH<br />

I ? it<br />

a." P.*<br />

is<br />

v~<br />

=<br />

as a.<br />

Si<br />

a . '<br />

E«J a §§ 8 |<br />

a~ as a," a.*<br />

> S<br />

as x<br />

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P<br />

Honor Division '27 36.3 2.3 142.2 1,849 130.2<br />

Pennsylvania '28 32.9 9-D 2.5 1 141.6 0.4-D 1,860 6 117.4 10-D 5 12 1<br />

'27 18.5 6.3 260.5 835 139.5<br />

Harlem '28 17.7 4-D 6.4 4 250.2 4-D 867 4 126.4 9-D 6 14 2<br />

'27 11.5 8.3 107.9 2,343 110.1<br />

Syracuse '28 10.8 6-D 9.0 2 106.3 1.5-D 2,475 5 107.S 2-D 9 16 3<br />

'27 18.6 6.3 133.3 1,441 101.7<br />

River '28 19.8 7-1 6.1 10 119.9 10-D 1,528 2 95.4 6-D 7 19 4<br />

'27 39.6 2.6 982.7 264 —<br />

Putnam '28 47.3 19-1 2.2 12 740.2 25-D 292 1 — — — 19'/2 5<br />

'27 23.1 4.2 181.4 1,290 110.5<br />

St. Lawrence '28 24.3 5-1 4.2 9 184.5 2-1 1,311 7 97.3 12-D 4 20 6<br />

'27 24.7 3.4 300.8 753 —<br />

Ottawa '28 23.3 6-D 3.3 3 329.0 9-1 749 12 — — — 22% 7<br />

'27 18.3 5.1 112.0 1,706 97.2<br />

Rochester '28 19.8 8-1 5.0 11 117.2 5-1 1,833 10 78.6 19-D 2 23 8<br />

'27 9.2 10.7 118.1 1,452 81.0<br />

Hudson '28 9.5 3-1 11.1 8 112.4 5-D 1,630 3 84.9 5-1 12 23 8<br />

'27 9.5 9.6 119.6 2,177 116.4<br />

Mohawk '28 9.5 — 9.8 6 126.4 6-1 2,207 11 112.9 3-D 8 25 10<br />

'27 22.5 4.6 206.8 920 98.7<br />

Adiron. '28 23.0 2-1 5.1 7 210.4 2-1 845 8 103.2 5-1 11 26 11<br />

'27 18.3 4.7 163.8 1,284 77.3<br />

Ontario '28 17.9 2-D 4.3 5 167.2 2-1 1,378 9 134.6 74-1 13 27 12<br />

'27 23.4 3.0 424.4 953 115.7<br />

Buffalo '28 35.5 52-1 3.1 13 571.9 35-1 993 13 96.9 16-D 3 29 13<br />

Harlem '2 7 — — — — 108.6<br />

Electric '28 — — — — — — 75.5 31-D 1 — —<br />

Hudson '27 — — — — 98.4<br />

Electric '28 — — — — — — 100.0 2-1 10 — —<br />

'27 35.2 2.5 146.7 1,993 119.2<br />

Fall Brook '28 31.6 10-D 2.8 147.9 0.8-1 1 907 114.9 4-D — —<br />

'27 38.4 1.9 136.7 1,702 139.6<br />

Beech Creek '28 36.8 4-D 1.9 133.2 3-D 1,801 120.2 14-D - —<br />

Total, '27 11.3 8.8 129.5 1,715 103.2<br />

Dist. No. 1 '28 11.5 2-1 9.0 130.4 0.7-1 1,764 101.4 2-D — —<br />

Total, '27 14.3 6.5 133.3 1.862 112.8<br />

Dist. No. 2 '28 14.0 2-D 6.8 134.5 0.9-1 1,939 99.6 12-D — —<br />

Total, '27 12.2 7.9 131.8 1,801 109.1<br />

Line East '28 12.3 0.8-1 8.2 132.8 0.8-1 1,862 100.3 8-D — —<br />

Total Consumption Saving or Loss Comparison<br />

Tons Cost Tons Value Per pent<br />

Passenger 84,302 $306 859 Loss 688 $2,504 0.82<br />

Freight 161,782 588,886 Loss 1,218 4,434 0.76<br />

Switch 55.063 200.429 *Saving 3,046 11,087 5.24<br />

Total 301,147 $1,096,174 Saving 1,140 $4,149 0.38<br />

"Figured on basis of pounds per 1,000 G.T.M 1927, 47,7, and 1U2S, •io.'i,<br />

Cost per ton (including Company haul)—S:!.(!4(i,<br />

1 1 f<br />

K. Year's Comparison om the Ohio Central<br />

February, 1927 and 1928<br />

PASSENGER FREIGHT SWITCH<br />

t„ 5S £ %C a<br />

« hi Si as<br />

£ h fi„ S* •? a* 6-s Ss Sa Is<br />

> ? 5 £ * i. E g a 5 u u rig a J h fc<br />

Q |M B, J<br />

a, O" h fc e<br />

0" fc- p, 0<br />

'27 25.9 3.3 150.6 1,564 152.3<br />

Ohio '28 27.3 5.4-1 3.4 140.8 6.5-D 1,582 154.7 1.6-1<br />

'27 22.3 3.7 106.5 1,995 109.6<br />

<strong>Southern</strong> '28 21.8 2.2-D 3.4 112.3 5.4-1 1,915 107.1 2.3-D<br />

Total, '27 24.4 3.4 138.0 1,667 146.2<br />

O. C. Lines '28 25.2 3.3-1 3.4 131.1 5.0-D 1,681 146.2 —<br />

Total Consumption Total Saline or Loss Comparison in<br />

Tons Cost Tons Value Per eent<br />

Passenger 3.248 $6,971 Loss 103 S'09 3 3<br />

Freight 22,772 45.909 Saving 1,298 2 635 5 4<br />

Switch 8.314 16,830 *Saving 469 952 5.3<br />

Total 34,334 $69,710 Saving 1,664 $3,378 4^6<br />

'Figured on basis of pounds per 1,000 G.T.M.—1927, 50.6; 1928, 47.9.<br />

Average eost per ton, including handling and 2T> eents per ton haulage $2,030.<br />

pie. And his 'cubs' without exception,<br />

so far as they have desired to remain<br />

with the Big Four, have been retained<br />

to this day. That is a remarkable<br />

thing; they have been the kind of men<br />

the company wanted to keep, and,<br />

also, their company has always been<br />

the one they have wanted to stay with.<br />

"It took a strong man's full time<br />

and strength in those days to handle<br />

a small-station job. All he had to do<br />

was to take and deliver train orders,<br />

do the Western Union work, sell passenger<br />

tickets, receive and deliver<br />

freight and collect therefor, carry the<br />

mail both ways between postoffice and<br />

train four or five times daily, handle<br />

the express in and out, block all trains<br />

and report their passage, make 6,000<br />

reports daily and weekly and monthly<br />

and yearly, conduct a peck of correspondence<br />

each fortnight with important<br />

clerks whose chief stock-in-trade<br />

in their letters was 'Please advise now<br />

whether you clearly understand and<br />

be governed accordingly,' put up and<br />

take down switch lamps a mile apart<br />

—and when the agent, after this exercise,<br />

would be resting, he could tend<br />

the fires, shoo buggy drivers out of<br />

the way of the fast mail, rid up the<br />

warehouse, entertain the section crew,<br />

and wonder whether '35' would be two<br />

hours late or four. A small town station<br />

in these swift days is a graveyard<br />

compared to what they were in 1900.<br />

"For seventy-five years David Roberts<br />

walked among neighbors in Rushsylvania.<br />

His life was an open book.<br />

In that book is written and there they<br />

have read it and shall read it forever,<br />

an honorable record made by a virtuous<br />

and worthy man who did his work<br />

the best he knew and boasted of it not<br />

at all. He trained upwards of twenty<br />

boys for useful lives. All who knew<br />

him had faith in him. He was a cheerful<br />

friend every day to every man and<br />

woman and child he met. He offered<br />

his life for the Union in the dread<br />

days of the Civil War and he served<br />

in the later months of the fearful<br />

struggle in Virginia. So far as I can<br />

now recall he was the last old soldier<br />

from Rushsylvania, resident there.<br />

"Faithful, loyal servant; kindly<br />

gentleman, true citizen of his town,<br />

carrying his share of the load without<br />

any murmur; soldier of the Republic;<br />

esteemed by his'neighbors; loved next<br />

their fathers by all his 'boys,'—we<br />

give you hail and farewell—till we<br />

meet again. You are on board The<br />

Unlimited, the blocks are all down,<br />

your pass is signed by the Chief Himself,<br />

and you are bound for the Union<br />

Station of Eternity. If they will let<br />

you have a little space Up There, Uncle<br />

Dave, we'd like you to fix up another<br />

practice line like we had in old<br />

'Va' and all us boys will want to start<br />

in with you again learning the Morse<br />

code and have you send us out fit to<br />

behave ourselves, running the business<br />

of the Celestial Central."<br />

B. & A. Supervisors Meet at<br />

Dinner in West Springfield<br />

"|\/rORE than a hundred persons at-<br />

A<br />

tended the festivities of the Boston<br />

& Albany Supervisors' Club at the<br />

West Springfield Y. M. C. A. the evening<br />

of March 26.<br />

W. S. Rich, with bell rope and loco-<br />

ew York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S 65<br />

motive bell, punctuated the intervals<br />

of the program, and acted as general<br />

factotum.<br />

There was music during the dinner<br />

with acrobatic stunts and boxing<br />

matches afterward. There was also<br />

.1 whistling solo given by E. A. Sullivan<br />

and motion pictures of a Pullman<br />

travelogue.<br />

A number of officers of the road<br />

were present, including J. L. Truden,<br />

General Superintendent, Boston; H. J.<br />

Curry, Superintendent of the Albany<br />

Division; F. A. Butler, Superintendent<br />

of Motive Power; F. S. Austin,<br />

Purchasing Agent, and G. E. Johnston,<br />

General Storekeeper.<br />

The committee of arrangements<br />

consisted of D. E. Viger, chairman;<br />

A. F. Rockefeller, H. C. Fletcher, L.<br />

S. Erickson, H. Van Delinda and R.<br />

M. Schilling.<br />

West Park Grew Gives Aid in<br />

Fire Near Cleveland<br />

kURING a fire at the Hardwood<br />

Products Company plant at West<br />

Park, just outside of Cleveland, March<br />

2, some commendable action was taken<br />

by employes which not only saved the<br />

company equipment, but made it possible<br />

for the fire department to fight<br />

the fire better.<br />

Conductor G. E. Copfer, who regularly<br />

has charge of the yard engine in<br />

this territory, was off duty on this<br />

date, but he happened to be in a restaurant<br />

on Lorain Street when this<br />

fire started. He left the restaurant<br />

and, going to a yard telephone, called<br />

Assistant General Yard Master Miles<br />

at West Park at about 8:10 P.M., and<br />

notified him of the fire, stating that<br />

there were six cars on this industrial<br />

track that would be endangered. He<br />

also called the fire department.<br />

Mr. Miles, with West Park engine,<br />

manned by Engineman W. H. Beckwith,<br />

Fireman E. M. Stevens, Conductor<br />

P. J. Gallagher and Brakeman C.<br />

W. Barker and J. Eberly, left immediately<br />

for Lorain Street, making a<br />

cross-over movement, and pulled five<br />

cars, which were solid loads of lumber,<br />

and one car, partly loaded, from<br />

this industrial track and'took them to<br />

West Park.<br />

The fire was close to the cars, which<br />

were spotted, being from six to ten<br />

feet apart, and on account of the smoke<br />

it was with difficulty that the men<br />

made the couplings and succeeded in<br />

. pulling the cars out without damage<br />

to them or their contents. The cars<br />

were pulled at 8:25 P.M., or approximately<br />

fifteen minutes after being<br />

notified.<br />

The pulling of these cars aided the<br />

fire department in reaching points of<br />

vantage in fighting the fire.<br />

Big Business for Fall Brook<br />

Coal Co. Way Back in 1891<br />

NEWSPAPER clipping of 1891<br />

and a handbill printed in 1863<br />

throw, interesting light on the early<br />

history of the Fall Brook Coal Company.<br />

The handbill, drawn up by John<br />

Magee, President of the Company,<br />

stipulates that a fine of twenty-five<br />

cents will be imposed on all persons<br />

riding on the engines of the company.<br />

February Fuel Performances on Lime West<br />

1927 and 1928<br />

PASSENGER SERVICE FREIGHT SERVICE SWITCH SERVICE<br />

n " • I t s< * L£ S<br />

e<br />

a • 5 a a ? a a s e<br />

« M<br />

a<br />

«. g a -a &<br />

s «, So<br />

a., as > : i !s h> C B a>as 6<br />

9 S1 • S -8, i « W<br />

o ^ t<br />

4<br />

a<br />

c<br />

BI .2 tit i j a i aw<br />

a a." i£ c v~ «<br />

A<br />

as a." a ,<br />

e<br />

a<br />

as x o<br />

•27 36.2 2.98 367.5 637 6,089 196.1<br />

Lansing '28 27.2 24.9 2.98 1 345.2 6.1 555 5,262 2 157.8 19.5 4 7 1<br />

•27 12.4 8.77 116.4 2,416 38,575 176.1<br />

Toledo '28 11.5 7.3 9.07 4 112.7 3.2 2,243 41,180 5 135.5 23.1 3 12 2<br />

'27 25.4 3.98 230.0 1,009 10,219 122.2<br />

Michigan '28 22.2 12.6 4.26 3 206.3 10.3 1,014 9,581 1 142.3 *16.4 9 13 3<br />

'27 21.8 4.28 169.6 1,645 22,901 123.5<br />

Franklin '28 24.2 *11.0 4.15 9 161.7 4.7 1,750 26,335 3 88.7 28.2 1 13 3<br />

'27 16.6 7.31 138.2 2,236 37,681 138.9<br />

Western '28 16.0 3.6 7.42 5 133.5 3.4 2,082 38,072 4 141.1 *1.6 7 16 5<br />

'27 28.3 3.71 169.3 1,690 21,278 224.0<br />

Illinois '28 29.9 *5.7 3.42 8 166.0 1.9 1,633 22,312 6 169.7 24.2 2 16 5<br />

•27 14.5 7.59 141.3 2,103 30,322 108.3<br />

Cleveland '28 14.2 2.1 7.82 6 144.1 *2.0 1,941 34,161 7 105.9 2.2 6 19 7<br />

'27 33.3 2.16 283.5 1,239 16,666 149.5<br />

Alliance '28 26.9 19.2 2.08 2 369.8 *30.4 829 8,330 9 200.4 *34.0 10 21 8<br />

'27 12.0 8.52 116.1 2,486 39,894 104.8<br />

Erie '28 12.3 *2.5 8.48 7 125.5 *8.1 2,349 42,581 8 110.7 *5.6 8 23 9<br />

'27 179.5<br />

Cleve. Ter'l '28 160.3 10.7 5<br />

'27 13.2 7.90 136.3 2,149 115.6<br />

3rd Dist. '28 13.3 *.8 7.97 138.2 *1.4 2,083 102.5 11.3<br />

'27 16.5 6.82 149.3 1,877 159.1<br />

4th Dist. '28 15.4 6.7 6.94 142.3 4.7 1.800 140.9 11.4<br />

'27 14.6 7.41 141.6 2,030 29,031 158.4<br />

Total '28 14.1 3.4 7.51 139.9 1.2 1,957 31,147 141.3 10.8<br />

Consumption Loss or Saving Compared with<br />

Total February. 1927<br />

Tons Cost Tons Cost Per cent<br />

Passenger 50,764 $180,000 Saving 1,795 $6,365 3.4<br />

Freight 118,418 419,910 Saving 1,439 5,103 1.2<br />

Switch 34,540 122,479 Saving 3,555 12,606 9.3<br />

Total 203,722 $722,398 Total Saving ... 6,789 $24,074 3.2<br />

* Increase.<br />

Figured on basis of pounds per 1,000 G.T.M 1927, 4S.0; 192S, 40.S.<br />

Progress in Fuel Conservation<br />

New York Central Railroad I Including Ohio Central)<br />

1927 Compared with 1926<br />

PASSENGER FREIGHT SWITCH TOTAL,<br />

a a a a<br />

S « a s " ? " a s "<br />

- h ft 9 A h 5 It U 9 »5 U<br />

e 5. 8 » « 8 i Z S 6<br />

• *<br />

k f c - j ' ^ a . k 6 •= »i > a><br />

I I £ £ J J I It I<br />

g it it 1 tt it it H I a y ;<br />

£ a a I I a a 1 « 1 I • * , -3<br />

- a a ? o a s R B 5 9 B B<br />

— / BR - ij M « Vl VI BC M H 91 OB<br />

1 $112,524 3.6 — $250,818 8.4 $77,401 6.8 — $440,743 6.2 *2<br />

2 121,721 8.1 — 389,882 9.3 75,264 4.9 — 586,867 8.1 *1<br />

3 21,095 1.7 — 192,800 6.2 — $20,578 2.7 193,317 3.8 *4<br />

4 46,737 4.2 — 105,670 5.0 — 28,159 4.0 124,248 3.2 *4<br />

O. C. — $8,044 9.7 58,308 7.2 18,178 6.7 — 68,442 5.8 *3<br />

Grand<br />

Total $294,033 4.1 $997,478 7.5 $122,106 2.7 $1,413,617 5.7<br />

^Relative development in eonservation of fuel based on per eent reduction ill<br />

unit consumption in each service.<br />

AVERAGE UNIT CONSUMPTION<br />

l i t<br />

Passenger Freight Switch<br />

m<br />

i<br />

s t<br />

- " \"ol EFo V2-5 7<br />

w 2<br />

? a l l<br />

> L "<br />

3 c a r s w e r e m o v e d t h a t d a<br />

y><br />

2 12^8 13.9 119.1 131.2 101.0 106.7 of which 1,471 were loaded. Nearly<br />

3 11.9 12.1 128.9 136.6 132. 128. five hundred loaded coal cars could<br />

4 14.8 15.2 133.5 140.5 141. 138. n ot be moved<br />

O. C. 23.4 21.5 123.2 135.4 133.3 142.9 " " " ^ .<br />

The clipping wisely comments: It<br />

r<br />

' ' is said that the New York Central<br />

"A proper regard for life and limb contemplates building a double track<br />

justifies and makes this Regulation a on the Auburn branch of the road beduty,"<br />

declares the bill. tween Syracuse and Rochester. It is<br />

The newspaper clipping describes a to be hoped that this may be done,<br />

record freight movement one Sunday. There is a great need for additional<br />

No passenger trains were run that track for the largely increasing busiday,<br />

and the company's entire stock ness of the road. There is not a local-<br />

•of locomotives was utilized in moving ity between the two cities named that<br />

freight, besides three engines borrowed would not be materially benefitted by<br />

from the Beech Creek Railroad. In such an arrangement."


66 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Committees Named for Track Meet in Erie<br />

HE big 1928 Track Meet of the<br />

T: New York Central Lines Athletic<br />

Associations, scheduled for August 15<br />

at Erie, Pa., got off to a flying start<br />

when, on April 20, the organization<br />

meeting of interested A. A. officials<br />

was held at Erie to dispose of the<br />

preliminary arrangements.<br />

Through its president, A. B. Hyder,<br />

the Erie Athletic Association has<br />

pledged its utmost support and co-operation<br />

to the success of the Meet, and<br />

in the main the major portion of the<br />

work will be performed by Erie people<br />

who have accepted their responsibility<br />

cheerfully and without reservation.<br />

As in the past, Lt.-Col. H. W. Taylor<br />

heads the committees as General<br />

Chairman. C. S. McGinley, of Buffalo,<br />

who has been responsible for the<br />

carrying out of the track events portion<br />

of previous Meets, will again be<br />

in charge of that most important committee.<br />

Inasmuch as it is almost a<br />

colossal task to guide the destinies of<br />

some seven hundred athletes through<br />

the intricate program now being carried<br />

out in the course of one day, the<br />

rich experience gained by the genial<br />

"Charlie" in the past will be invaluable.<br />

To meet successfully the standards<br />

set by the Columbus, Toledo and Syracuse<br />

Meets of past years and even<br />

surpass these, if possible, is the aim<br />

of every member of the General Committee,<br />

and this view was expressed<br />

and recorded in the minutes of the<br />

Erie meeting as being subscribed to<br />

by all present.<br />

The chairmen of the various committees<br />

were appointed as follows:<br />

E. V. Brogan, Superintendent of the<br />

Erie Division, entertainment; L. A.<br />

Brown, reception; S. C. Upson,<br />

grounds; W. C. Sennet, railroad<br />

transportation; J. J. Frawley, local<br />

transportation; A. B. Hyder, publicity;<br />

J. D. Roosa, trap shooting; J. C.<br />

Merkle, quoits and horseshoes; W. S.<br />

Baker, programs; Dr. A. H. Roth,<br />

first aid; E. G. Fleming, color guard.<br />

Chairman Brown of the reception<br />

committee has already taken up the<br />

task of providing sleeping accommodations<br />

for the visiting athletes.<br />

Rooms to the number of 200 are being<br />

sought in the Ford Hotel for the girl<br />

athletes; 400 more to be divided among<br />

other hotels for the men. The Reed<br />

House will be home sweet home for<br />

the trap shooters, while spectators<br />

may hang their hats at their own convenience.<br />

However, Mr. Brown has<br />

promised that his committee will extend<br />

genuine Erie hospitality to all<br />

who seek it of him.<br />

The grounds committee, headed by<br />

S. C. Upson, has already set about the<br />

COMING EVENTS<br />

May 11—Erie, Pa., Friday night. Waldameer<br />

Park, Spring Dance of New York Central<br />

Athletic Association of Erie Division.<br />

June 1—Camp Undercliff, Lake Placid, N. Y.,<br />

opens for season. Again under management<br />

of J. K. Angell. Available to Veterans and<br />

their families; to members of Athletic Associations<br />

and their families; to other employes<br />

of all system lines and their families. Make<br />

advance reservations.<br />

June 16—Clearfield, Pa., Saturday. Joint Picnic<br />

of Beech Creek Chapter of New York<br />

Central Veterans, with members of the Jersey<br />

Shore New York Central Athletic Association.<br />

June 16—Cedar Point, Ohio (near Sandusky).<br />

Annual Meeting and Outing of the Lake<br />

Shore Pioneer Chapter, New York Central<br />

Veterans. Open to members and their families.<br />

Banquet to all pensioned members (and<br />

their wives) who have retired during the<br />

preceding year.<br />

June 25—Detroit, Mich. Bob-Lo Island, Detroit<br />

River, Monday. Annual Meeting and<br />

Outing of the Michigan Central Pioneer Association.<br />

July 19—Buffalo, N. Y. (Erie Beach, Ontario),<br />

Thursday. Joint Picnic of all Veterans' Associations<br />

of the New York Central Railroad.<br />

Open also to members of all Athletic Associations<br />

of the New York Central Railroad<br />

and to families.<br />

August 4—Columbus, Ohio, Saturday. Picnic<br />

of Scioto Chapter, New York Central Veterans'<br />

Association and the Ladies' Auxiliary;<br />

Olentangy Park.<br />

August 15—Erie, Pa., Wednesday. Academy<br />

High School Stadium, Fifth Annual Track<br />

Meet of the Athletic Associations of the New<br />

York Central Lines, including Quoits and<br />

Horse Shoe Tournament on "Triangle"<br />

grounds adjoining Stadium and Trap Shooting<br />

contest at Lawrence Park (Erie Gun<br />

Club), about four miles east of Erie.<br />

August 25—Erie, Pa., Saturday. "Joy Day,"<br />

Fifth Annual Basket Picnic of New York<br />

Central Athletic Association of the Erie Divison,<br />

Waldameer Park .<br />

// officers of organizations, or committees<br />

of arrangements, will give advance<br />

notice of their plans for gatherings<br />

that may be of interest to others<br />

than their own members, or of general<br />

interest to readers of this Magazine,<br />

they will be published from month to<br />

month, in the hope that the list will<br />

enable associations to arrange their<br />

dates without interfering tvith one<br />

another.<br />

Notice may be given to William S.<br />

Baker, Special Assistant to Vice-<br />

President, Personnel, New York Central<br />

Lines, New York City.<br />

task of gathering equipment, athletic<br />

and otherwise, for the coming Meet.<br />

They, like the proverbial ship carpenters,<br />

must be able to supply everything,<br />

from a wall tent to a safety<br />

pin for some unlucky athlete, their list<br />

including some bulky hurdles, water<br />

coolers, score boards, twelve-pound<br />

shots, and a raft of other materials<br />

contributing to the smooth running<br />

of events.<br />

One of the most interesting phases<br />

of the Meet, the trap shooting, handled<br />

by J. D. Roosa, Chief of Police,<br />

Line East of Buffalo, will be held at<br />

the Gun Club, about four miles from<br />

the Stadium. Additional traps will<br />

be provided and convenient arrangements<br />

will be made to transport the<br />

shooters to and from the club.<br />

Needless to say, the program committee<br />

is in the market for a score or<br />

more of Erie's fairest ladies to distribute<br />

the souvenir programs on the<br />

day of the Meet. Keen competition<br />

will undoubtedly make the task of<br />

choosing a difficult one.<br />

While no definite announcement has<br />

been made, it is understood that the<br />

evening following the Meet will be devoted<br />

to dancing, and even now Chairman<br />

Brogan of the entertainment committee<br />

is casting about for music, hall<br />

and fixin's.<br />

Dr. Roth, Company Surgeon and<br />

head of the first aid committee, will<br />

be charged with the important task<br />

of caring for the "charley horse" and<br />

scratch and bruise afflictions of the<br />

pampered athletes. It is almost certain<br />

that two nurses will be on hand,<br />

and every effort will be made to watch<br />

over the general welfare of crowd and<br />

contestants alike.<br />

Incidentally, one comfort for the<br />

men athletes will be the use of the<br />

big seventy-five-foot pool of the high<br />

school, where a cooling plunge may<br />

precede or follow the events of the<br />

day.<br />

Now, as to the folks who plan to<br />

attend the Track Meet, not as contestants,<br />

but as rooters, spectators or<br />

just plain holiday seekers. Theirs<br />

will be the enviable position of honored<br />

guests of the city of Erie, and<br />

the Erie Athletic Association information<br />

booths will be plentiful and<br />

convenient. Transportation arrangements<br />

will be theirs for the asking and<br />

everything will be done for their material<br />

and spiritual comfort. The<br />

Stadium offers more than enough room<br />

so that crowding will be out of the<br />

question and, on the whole, it looks<br />

like the biggest and best Track Meet<br />

for the New York Centralites.<br />

NP ) ork Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 67.<br />

4 0 Major League Baseball Teams This Season<br />

(ASEBALL, apparently, has hit<br />

its stride on the New York<br />

Central Lines, for this year will<br />

i. no less than forty major league<br />

teams in the field for the champion-<br />

111p title and possession of the beautlful<br />

W. K. Vanderbilt trophy. Ali<br />

hough the season is now in full swing,<br />

11 might be well to survey the prosperls,<br />

investigate the plans of the<br />

governing body, Section I, and other-<br />

\\ ise consider the health of the sport<br />

mi the Lines.<br />

Thanks to the groundwork so ably<br />

performed by past committees on baselull,<br />

the game as far as the New<br />

•i ork Central is concerned is now<br />

practically as completely organized as<br />

it ever will be. Rules governing every<br />

feature of eligibility and play-off have<br />

been standardized to such an extent<br />

lh.it only a sea-lawyer will attempt to<br />

question their validity this year.<br />

Whether Detroit, winners of last<br />

Mai's title, can repeat the trick, remains<br />

to be seen. Certainly there<br />

licuild be enough competition to make<br />

i In- events leading up to the final outline<br />

extremely interesting for the old<br />

faithfuls who yearly wear grooves in<br />

bleacher seats watching the progress<br />


68 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

MENTORS OF NEW YORK CENTRAL LINES BASEBALL FOR 1928<br />

Top row, left to right—John J. Smith, Chicago Junction; C. E. Strong, Peoria &<br />

Eastern; E. R. Burgess, Michigan Central; C. A. Bounds, Indiana Harbor Belt; and<br />

F. M. Sisson, Ohio Central Lines. Bottom row—P. S. Yermak, Pittsburgh & Lake<br />

Erie; T. O. Quinn, Big Four; D. W. Sterling, New York Central, West, Chairman;<br />

and C. L. MacDonald, New York Central, East.<br />

men involved. Of course, the usual<br />

arrangements in the event of rain or<br />

postponement for other causes will<br />

prevail.<br />

So much for the championships.<br />

On April 14 the Big Four opened the<br />

season with its ten teams lined up to<br />

play. May 12 for the Western Group,<br />

April 28 for the Lake Erie Group,<br />

May 28 for the Peoria & Eastern,<br />

May 5 for the P. & L. E., and June<br />

23 for the Eastern Group, are the<br />

other curtain-raiser dates.<br />

The complete Lines West season<br />

schedule follows:<br />

BIG FOUR<br />

April 14—Springfield at Mt. Carmel<br />

Cleveland at Mattoon<br />

Danville at Columbus<br />

Bellefontaine at Cincinnati<br />

Van Wert at Indianapolis<br />

April 21—Cleveland at Danville<br />

Mattoon at Columbus<br />

Cincinnati at Van Wert<br />

Springfield at Bellefontaine<br />

Mt. Carmel at Indianapolis<br />

April 28—Danville at Mt. Carmel<br />

Bellefontaine at Cleveland<br />

Columbus at Cincinnati<br />

Van Wert at Mattoon<br />

Indianapolis at Springfield<br />

May 5—Cleveland at Columbus<br />

Mattoon at Mt. Carmel<br />

Cincinnati at Indianapolis<br />

Springfield at Danville<br />

Van Wert at Bellefontaine<br />

May 12—Mattoon at Springfield<br />

Cincinnati at Cleveland<br />

Mt. Caimel at Van Wert<br />

Indianapolis at Columbus<br />

Danville at Bellefontaine<br />

May 19—Cleveland at Springfield<br />

Mattoon at Cincinnati<br />

Danville at Van Wert<br />

Bellefontaine at Indianapolis<br />

Columbus at Mt. Carmel<br />

May 26—Bellefontaine at Mattoon<br />

Cincinnati at Springfield<br />

Mt. Carmel at Cleveland<br />

Van Wert at Columbus<br />

Indianapolis at Danville<br />

June 2—Danville at Cincinnati<br />

(2 games) Bellefontaine at Mt. Carmel<br />

Springfield at Columbus<br />

Van Wert at Cleveland<br />

Indianapolis at Mattoon<br />

June 9—Cleveland at Indianapolis<br />

(2 games) Mattoon at Danville<br />

Columbus at Bellefontaine<br />

Springfield at Van Wert<br />

Mt. Carmel at Cincinnati<br />

June 16—Mattoon at Cleveland<br />

Columbus at Danville<br />

Cincinnati at Bellefontaine<br />

Mt. Carmel at Springfield<br />

Indianapolis at Van Wert<br />

June 23—Danville at Cleveland<br />

Bellefontaine at Springfield<br />

Columbus at Mattoon<br />

Van Wert at Cincinnati<br />

Indianapolis at Mt. Carmel<br />

June 30—Cleveland at Bellefontaine<br />

Mattoon at Van Wert<br />

Cincinnati at Columbus<br />

Springfield at Indianapolis<br />

Mt. Carmel at Danville<br />

July 7—Danville at Springfield<br />

Bellefontaine at Van Wert<br />

Columbus at Cleveland<br />

Mt. Carmel at Mattoon<br />

Indianapolis at Cincinnati<br />

July 14—Cleveland at Cincinnati<br />

Bellefontaine at Danville<br />

Columbus at Indianapolis<br />

Springfield at Mattoon<br />

Van Wert at Mt. Carmel<br />

July 21—Cincinnati at Mattoon<br />

Springfield at Cleveland<br />

Mt. Carmel at Columbus<br />

Van Wert at Danville<br />

Indianapolis at Bellefontaine<br />

July 28—Cleveland at Mt. Carmel<br />

Mattoon at Bellefontaine<br />

Danville at Indianapolis<br />

Columbus at Van Wert<br />

Springfield at Cincinnati<br />

WESTERN GROUP<br />

May 12—1. H. B. at Elkhart<br />

Toledo at South Bend<br />

May 19—C. J. at Toledo<br />

South Bend at I. H. B.<br />

May 26-—Toledo at Elkhart<br />

South Bend at C. J.<br />

June 2—C. J. at I. H. B.<br />

Elkhart at Toledo<br />

June 9—I. H. B. at South Bend<br />

Elkhart at C. J.<br />

June 16—South Bend at Elkhart<br />

Toledo at I. H. B.<br />

June 23—C. J. at South Bend<br />

I. H. B. at Toledo<br />

June 30—Elkhart at South Bend<br />

Toledo at C. J.<br />

July 7—C. J. at Elkhart<br />

July 14—1. H. B. at C. J.<br />

South Bend at Toledo<br />

July 21—Elkhart at I. H. B.<br />

LAKE ERIE GROUP<br />

April 28—Cleveland at Sandusky<br />

Ashtabula at Erie<br />

May 5—Cleveland at Ashtabula<br />

Erie at Sandusky<br />

-Cleveland at Erie<br />

Ashtabula at Sandusky<br />

-Cleveland at Sandusky<br />

Ashtabula at Erie<br />

—Cleveland at Ashtabula<br />

Sandusky at Erie<br />

-Erie at Cleveland<br />

Ashtabula at Sandusky<br />

-Sandusky at Cleveland<br />

Erie at Ashtabula<br />

-Cleveland at Sandusky<br />

Ashtabula at Erie<br />

-Cleveland at Ashtabula<br />

Erie at Sandusky<br />

-Erie at Cleveland<br />

Sandusky at Ashtabula<br />

-Ashtabula at Cleveland<br />

Sandusky at Erie<br />

-Cleveland at Erie<br />

Sandusky at Ashtabula<br />

-Ashtabula at Cleveland<br />

Sandusky at Erie<br />

-Sandusky at Cleveland<br />

Erie at Ashtabula<br />

PEORIA & EASTERN GROUP<br />

May 26—Indianapolis at Urbana<br />

June 13—Urbana at Indianapolis<br />

June 27 and July 4—Indianapolis at Urbana<br />

July 25—Urbana at Indianapolis<br />

PITTSBURGH & LAKE ERIE GROUP<br />

May 5—Youghiogheny at Pittsburgh<br />

Ohio at Monogahela<br />

May 12—Monongahela at Youghiogheny<br />

14—Pittsburgh at Ohio<br />

May 19—Monongahela at Pittsburgh<br />

Ohio at Youghiogheny<br />

May 26—Youghiogheny at Monongahela<br />

Ohio at Pittsburgh<br />

June 2—Pittsburgh at Youghiogheny<br />

June 4—Monongahela at Ohio<br />

June 9—Pittsburgh at Monongahela<br />

June 11—Youghiogheny at Ohio<br />

June 16—Youghiogheny at Pittsburgh<br />

Ohio at Monogahela<br />

June 23—Monongahela at Youghiogheny<br />

June 25—Pittsburgh at Ohio<br />

June 30—Monongahela at Pittsburgh<br />

Ohio at Youghiogheny<br />

July 7—Youghiogheny at Monongahela<br />

Ohio at Pittsburgh<br />

July 16—Monongahela at Ohio<br />

July 14—Pittsburgh at Youghiogheny<br />

July 23—Youghiogheny at Ohio<br />

July 21—Pittsburgh at Monongahela<br />

OHIO CENTRAL LINES GROUP<br />

May 5—Hobson at Charleston<br />

Columbus at Bucyrus<br />

May 12—Charleston at Bucyrus<br />

Hobson at Toledo (2)<br />

May 19—Charleston at Hobson<br />

Toledo at Columbus<br />

May 26—Bucyrus at Columbus<br />

June 9—Bucyrus at Hobson<br />

Toledo at Charleston (2)<br />

June 16—Hobson at Columbus<br />

Bucyrus at Toledo<br />

June 23—Charleston at Columbus<br />

Hobson at Bucyrus<br />

July 7—Bucyrus at Charleston<br />

Columbus at Hobson<br />

July 14—Toledo at Bucyrus<br />

Columbus at Charleston<br />

July 21—Columbus at Toledo<br />

MICHIGAN CENTRAL GROUP<br />

May 11—Toledo at St. Thomas<br />

May 12—Marshall at Detroit<br />

Niles at Jackson<br />

May 19—St. Thomas at Marshall<br />

Detroit at Niles<br />

Jackson at Toledo<br />

May 26—Marshall at Jackson<br />

Toledo at Detroit<br />

May 30—Niles at St. Thomas<br />

June 2—Jackson at Detroit<br />

Niles at Marshall<br />

June 8—Detroit at St. Thomas<br />

June 9—Marshall at Toledo<br />

Jackson at Niles<br />

June 16—St. Thomas at Jackson<br />

Toledo at Niles<br />

Detroit at Marshall<br />

June 22—Marshall at St. Thomas<br />

June 23—Niles at Detroit<br />

Toledo at Jackson<br />

June 30—St. Thomas at Niles<br />

Detroit at Toledo<br />

Jackson at Marshall<br />

July 7—St. Thomas at Detroit<br />

Toledo at Marshall<br />

July 14—Niles at Toledo<br />

July 21—St. Thomas at Toledo<br />

Marshall at Niles<br />

Detroit at Jackson<br />

July 25—Jackson at St. Thomas<br />

Percentage to decide the winner.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S 69<br />

G. H. Wilson, master of ceremonies for the bowlers' banquet in New York, April 17, is shown here amid the crowd, holding<br />

the cup that was permanently presented to the Hudson Division No. 1 team, winners of three annual tournaments.<br />

Hudson Division Bowlers Given Vanderbilt<br />

Cup at Banquet an New York<br />

H<strong>TH</strong>E New York Central Bowling<br />

League of Manhattan officially<br />

closed its 1927-28 season with a dinner<br />

in the Railroad Y.M.C.A. of New<br />

York City, April 17. Team No. 1 of<br />

the Hudson Division was presented<br />

with the William K. Vanderbilt loving<br />

cup, having won the third and final<br />

leg on the trophy the past season. The<br />

cup was donated by Mr. Vanderbilt<br />

in 1923, and has been won by the Secretary<br />

and Comptroller No. 1 teams<br />

in addition to the Hudson<br />

players.<br />

Division<br />

Superintendent Garret H. Wilson<br />

was the benignant master of ceremonies<br />

of the occasion. Besides being<br />

toastmaster, he helped slightly in the<br />

singing, ate a great deal of the dinner,<br />

presented the awards and helped<br />

the photographer move chairs.<br />

Mr. Wilson did very little talking<br />

on his own account, but introduced a<br />

dozen speakers, who utterly failed to<br />

dismay the crowd of 150, who had<br />

been well fortified by a good meal and<br />

cigars.<br />

Ward W. Adair, Executive Secrery<br />

of the Y.M.C.A., brought a mesge<br />

on "spares." Mr. Adair broadned<br />

n the application of the term from<br />

i— bowling to everyday affairs, including<br />

spare time and spare change. The<br />

use of these "spares" figures up in the<br />

Anal score, he said. "The fellow who<br />

is careful of his spare change, won't<br />

have to borrow a dollar from his<br />

buddy 'until pay day' and there is an<br />

old but true saying: 'Take care of the<br />

dimes, and the dollars will take care<br />

of themselves'."<br />

F. H. Koenig, Secretary of the New<br />

York Bowling Association, of which<br />

the New York Central League is a<br />

member, congratulated the members<br />

11resent on their unusually strong representation<br />

during the season. The<br />

New York Central teams were second<br />

highest in the number of teams and<br />

players, being exceeded only by the<br />

Bell Laboratories, Mr. Koenig said.<br />

In the name of the New York Association,<br />

Mr. Koenig presented a gold<br />

medal to J. R. Graves, who made the<br />

highest individual score in a single<br />

game. Mr. Graves, who is on the<br />

Equipment Engineers team, scored<br />

267 pins.<br />

The history of bowling on the New<br />

York Central was told by George<br />

Adams, who organized the first bowling<br />

team thirty-five years ago. Mr.<br />

Adams, though past his prime, is still<br />

good with the balls.<br />

Among other guests of honor who<br />

spoke, were F. H. Meeder, Past President<br />

of the New York Central League;<br />

F. N. Melius, General Superintendent<br />

and Marine Manager; J. S. Conover,<br />

Auditor of Revenue, and C. W. Ryder,<br />

Bowling Editor of the New York Evening<br />

World. Mr. Ryder expressed his<br />

gratification at being present and<br />

urged the bowlers to make next season<br />

even better than the past.<br />

Mr. Wilson presented the Vanderbilt<br />

cup with an additional fifty-dollar<br />

prize to B. Weir, who represented the<br />

Hudson Division team No. 1, as Manager.<br />

TEAM PRIZES<br />

FOR GAMES WON (60 GAMES<br />

BOWLED)<br />

530.00 ),,, n n f Comptroller No. 1 $28.50 46<br />

27.00 (*<br />

r r i<br />

FINAL TEAM STANDING—1927-1928 TOURNAMENT High High<br />

Average total team<br />

Total team pins, score,<br />

TEAM Won Lost pins score one series one game<br />

Hudson Division No. 1 50 10 54,299 904.98 2,839 983<br />

Comptroller No. 1 46 14 53,224 887.06 2,921 990<br />

Electric Division No. 1 46 14 51,805 863.41 2,733 959<br />

Capital Expenditure Account 44 16 52,608 876.80 2,839 1,006<br />

Vice-President 42 18 52,690 878.16 2,865 1,019<br />

Comptroller No. 2 41 19 50,799 846.65 2,719 989<br />

District Freight Accounts, Weehawken... . 38 22 50,016 833.60 2,691 936<br />

Equipment Engineers 37 23 51,623 860.38 2.754 963<br />

Railroad Y.M.C.A 37 23 50,218 836.96 2,626 944<br />

Engineers 36 24 50,660 844.33 2,651 959<br />

Superintendent of Telegraph 30 30 49,651 827.51 2,687 928<br />

Purchasing Department 30 30 49,383 823.05 2,658 941<br />

Auditor of Revenue 29 31 43,626 727.10 2,535 909<br />

Marine Department 25 35 47,318 788.63 2,511 942<br />

Passenger Traffic No. 1 21 39 46,011 766.85 2,661 939<br />

Superintendent of Car Service 20 40 46,354 772.56 2,562 923<br />

Hudson Division No. 2 19 41 43,789 729.81 2,606 918<br />

Electric Division No. 2 16 44 45,232 753.86 2,481 918<br />

General Auditor 12 48 45,226 753.76 2,466 898<br />

Auditor of Coal and Coke 8 52 45.201 753.35 2,497 892<br />

Passenger Traffic No. 2 3 57 36,900 615. 2,289 827<br />

s / - u u<br />

1 Elec. Div. No. 1 28.50 46<br />

24.00 Capital Expend. Acct. ... 44<br />

21.50 Vice-President 42<br />

20.00 Comptroller No. 2 41<br />

18.50 D.F.A., Weehawken 38<br />

17.00) .--.(Equip. Eng'rs $16.25 37<br />

15.50 ( "•=>''\ Railroad Y.M.C.A. 16.25 37<br />

14.00 Engineers 36<br />

12.50) ,, ,. f Supt. of Telegraph $11.75 30<br />

11.00 j ) Purchasing Dept. 11.75 30<br />

9.50 Auditor of Revenue 29<br />

8.00 Marine Department 25<br />

6.50 Passenger Traffic No. 1 21<br />

5.00 Supt. of Car Service 20<br />

5.00 Hudson Division No. 2. 19<br />

5.00 Electric Division No. 2. . 16<br />

5.00 General Auditor 12<br />

5.00 Auditor of Coal and Coke 8<br />

5.00 Passenger Traffic No. 2 . 3<br />

HIGHEST TOTAL PINS FOR<br />

<strong>TH</strong>REE GAMES<br />

515.00 Comptroller No. 1 2,921<br />

10.00 Vice-President 2,865<br />

5.00 ( Hudson Division No. 1. $2.50 2,839<br />

\ Capital Expend. Acct. . . . . 2.50 2,839<br />

INDIVIDUAL PRIZES<br />

HIGHEST AVERAGE FOR SEASON<br />

515.00—H. J. Zeller, Comptroller No. 1. 189.56<br />

12.00—L. R. Brundage,<br />

Hudson Division No. 1 189.32<br />

10.00—B. Weir, Hud. Div. No. 1 188.41<br />

HIGHEST TOTAL PINS FOR <strong>TH</strong>REE<br />

GAMES IN ONE NIGHT<br />

510.00 W. C. Jarvis, Compt. No. 1 673<br />

7.00 E. M. Spencer, Cap. Exp. Acct. . 65"8<br />

f L. R. Brundage. Hud. Div. No. 1 652<br />

5.00 { C. Martin., D.F.A., Weehawken . 651<br />

I J. V. Clausen, Vice-President . 643


70<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Splendid Record for Team in<br />

Indianapolis<br />

HE Big Four Athletic Association<br />

Tof Indianapolis basketball team,<br />

runners-up for the Lines Championship<br />

and winners of three trophies for<br />

the year of 1927-28, played forty<br />

games during the past season, winning<br />

thirty-three, losing seven, scoring<br />

1,722 points while opponents piled<br />

up the total of 1,106.<br />

Howard was the leading point<br />

maker, scoring 514 points in thirtyeight<br />

games. This team defeated such<br />

teams as Morgantown Odd Fellows,<br />

state amateur champions of 1925-26;<br />

the Rushville Independents, state<br />

champions of 1926-27, and the United<br />

Paperboard Company of Wabash,<br />

Members of the Collinwood Apprentice Basketball Team who closed out a successful which is considered one of the strong­<br />

season with a win over the Sante Fe Apprentice team on March 24. From left to est teams in the northern part of the<br />

right, standing—D. Spidel, P. Martick, R. Busdiecker, F. Kossuth, G. Skuzinskas. state. They were defeated by the<br />

Seated—F. Pastorius, N. Spehar, H. Dutcheot, E. Stienicke and J. Charlillo. Morgantown Odd Fellows at Morgantown,<br />

the United Paperboard Com­<br />

Collinwood Apprentices Lauded Power at Collinwood, B. A. Eldridge, pany of Wabash at Wabash; the<br />

Master Mechanic of the A. T. & S. F. Hoosier Athletic Club in an overtime<br />

for Sportsmanship<br />

said in part:<br />

game. This was the only game they<br />

L<strong>TH</strong>OUGH the 1928 basketball "It was the general consensus of lost in the city league this year. They<br />

A season has long since passed opinion that your boys were as fine lost two games to the Pennsylvania<br />

down the echoing corridors of time, a bunch of apprentices as it has been Railroad team, which was the only<br />

it is not too late to mention the com­ our privilege to play with in athletic team that ever defeated the Indianpliments<br />

that have been extended to events, and the New York Central apolis quintet twice. They were de­<br />

members of the Collinwood Appren­ should be proud of having this type feated by the Cincinnati Big Four<br />

tices' team which closed a successful of young men in their employ, as they Athletic Association, the only Big<br />

season a short time ago. While the are their future mechanics and super­ Four team to beat this squad in the<br />

story of their season is not a radically visors on your road.<br />

last three years. They won the Big<br />

different one, the tale of their two<br />

Four trophy, the City League trophy,<br />

"The Cleveland apprentices played<br />

final games, a home and home series<br />

and by defeating the Hoosier Sham­<br />

a good, clean game and were real rocks 38 to 36 in an overtime period<br />

arranged with the apprentices of the sports, and while the Fort Madison game, won the Shriners' trophy which<br />

Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Rail­ apprentices were victorious in this was presented to them at the Murat<br />

way, at Collinwood, Ohio, and Fort game, there is no other team to whom temple. The team was coached by<br />

Madison, Iowa, deserves notice. we would rather lose, had we lost the Robert Nipper, Assistant basketball<br />

On March 10 the Collinwood boys game, than the New York Central ap­ coach of Butler University.<br />

journeyed to their opponents' home prentices."<br />

city for a contest which resulted in a<br />

loss. In this game one of those rare<br />

highlights of sportsmanship was displayed<br />

by a generous winner, Captain<br />

Bob Turner of the Santa _ Fe team.<br />

During a quarter rest period one of<br />

the Cleveland rooters took the floor,<br />

offering oranges to the Santa Fe boys<br />

and then to his own team. Of course<br />

this constituted a technical foul and<br />

the referee called it as such. Unwilling<br />

to take advantage of the spirit<br />

displayed by the Cleveland man, Capt.<br />

Turner closed his eyes and heaved<br />

wild from the free throw line. _ It was<br />

a fine gesture and was received as<br />

such by the entire audience.<br />

On March 24 Collinwood got its revenge,<br />

staging a beautiful game on<br />

their own court and taking the bacon<br />

with one point to spare. According<br />

to those who witnessed the game, the<br />

Collinwood quintet showed a complete<br />

reversal of form to win.<br />

The most cordial of relations was<br />

firmly cemented by the two games between<br />

the represented railroads. On<br />

the visit to Fort Madison the Collinwood<br />

boys shared the guest of honor<br />

table with the Santa Fe team, which<br />

was being lauded by their home folks<br />

at a banquet attended by more than<br />

500 people. Needless to say, on the<br />

occasion of the game at Collinwood<br />

the New York Central team returned In the Michigan Central Athletic Association Inter-departmental Basketball League,<br />

the courtesy.<br />

the Auditor of Freight Accounts Five captured the title for the season just closed.<br />

The players, who received a token emblematic of the championship, are: K. A.<br />

In a letter addressed to W. R. Lye, Chatterton, Don Fidler, R. Fenbert, John Draper, Jim Draper, Charles Wiggle,<br />

District Superintendent of Motive<br />

Floyd Kazmier, E. Graves and N. E. McKettrick (Manager).<br />

ew York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 7!<br />

est Side A . A . G o e s in F o r B o x i n g<br />

r<br />

I<strong>TH</strong> a smoker on April 14, at<br />

466 Lexington Avenue, and a<br />

dinner at the Elks Club of Union Hill,<br />

N. J., April 21, the West Side Athletic<br />

Association of New York City<br />

Teddy Martin (left), winner of the<br />

sub-novice title in the recent "Golden<br />

Gloves" amateur boxing stag, as he<br />

appeared with his sparring partner,<br />

ick Stolfi, at the West Side A.A.<br />

smoker.<br />

has gone in strong for society doings.<br />

The smokes were plentiful at the<br />

first affair, and so were the "wisecrackers";<br />

by the end of eight boxing<br />

bouts, the smokes were smoked out<br />

and the wise-crackers were burned<br />

out, but everybody had a good time.<br />

All of the gladiators were recruited<br />

from New York Central offices, and<br />

the fact that most of them were<br />

matched shortly before stepping into<br />

the ring, rather added zest and suspense<br />

to the program. You never<br />

knew but that you might see a good<br />

fight. The advisory board was there<br />

in full force and from a ringside position<br />

gave ample suggestions and criticism<br />

to either fighter that cared to<br />

listen.<br />

The star bout of the evening involved<br />

Messrs. W. (Butch) Dutcher<br />

and F. (Kid) Small, both barge captains<br />

of the Marine Department. It<br />

had been advertised as a grudge fight<br />

of years standing. Both weighed 160<br />

pounds under different circumstances<br />

—Small wore an overcoat standing on<br />

the scales and Dutcher presented an<br />

affidavit to his weight signed by fifteen<br />

sailors. His doctor had warned him<br />

against standing on the scales—the<br />

teetering was liable to nauseate him.<br />

The ages of both were given as<br />

forty-five, and on account of their<br />

extreme youth, neither would be allowed<br />

to smoke between rounds. The<br />

referee introduced them, and both expressed<br />

surprise and delight that the<br />

other had the nerve to come to the<br />

party. The gong sounded.<br />

For the first minute, they stalked<br />

ubout each other, getting warmed up.<br />

"Who started this fight?" one of the<br />

advisory board asked. Mr. Dutcher,<br />

scowling heavily, walked over to the<br />

ropes, leaned out of the ring and said<br />

what he had to say. It was Mr.<br />

Small's chance! Slipping up quietly<br />

in spite of shouts of warning from the<br />

crowd, he planted a neat wallop in the<br />

place where Mr. Dutcher rests when<br />

he has time. With a snarl of surprise<br />

the big man turned and aimed a<br />

savage right to Mr. Small's jaw,<br />

which the referee dodged just in time.<br />

Round one.<br />

Both men came out of their corners<br />

breathing heavily. Without noticing<br />

what they were doing, they hit each<br />

other simultaneously in the face. "Receive<br />

that for the canards you have<br />

circulated about me," shouted Butch<br />

Dutcher in his best Billingsgate. But<br />

ere long he was to regret that taunt.<br />

Mr. Small closed his eyes, lowered his<br />

head and advanced with outstretched<br />

arms. Mr. Dutcher watched in sheer<br />

amazement and sometimes he appeared<br />

to be puzzling the matter.<br />

One of Mr. Small's arms touched Mr.<br />

Dutcher finally, and then he understood,<br />

but too late. Mr. Small hit Mr.<br />

Dutcher! Round two.<br />

Both men rushed out of their corners,<br />

passed each other, but managed<br />

to turn around before reaching the<br />

other side. Then, with the cheers of<br />

their partisans ringing in their ears,<br />

they both pressed the attack. They<br />

exchanged rights and lefts, the referee<br />

maintaining a fair ratio. Mr. Small<br />

feinted and Mr. Dutcher passed out.<br />

Somebody said that it was the humidity.<br />

Mr. Dutcher came to himself before<br />

the count of nine and resumed<br />

his former upright position in answer<br />

to the cries of the crowd for an encore.<br />

Cries for fair play and the<br />

stroke of the gong saved both men<br />

from being knocked out by the referee.<br />

No decision was given as no harm<br />

was meant.<br />

Other bouts of the evening were between:<br />

Joe DeStefano and Joe De-<br />

Faro; Mike Burke and Vic McGratton;<br />

Nick Stolfi and Teddy Martin;<br />

Danny Richards and Frank Steng;<br />

Ed Ralston and C. Sewall; R. O.<br />

Moran and Pete Connaughton; Andy<br />

Parente and Arthur Deluca. All were<br />

no-decision bouts. Teddy Martin was<br />

winner in the sub-novice class of the<br />

"Golden Glove" amateur bouts staged<br />

by the New York Daily News recently.<br />

Captain Dutcher, as representative<br />

of the Marine Department, was presented<br />

with a silver loving cup his<br />

department won in the recent membership<br />

drive staged by the association.<br />

Sergeant Hickey made the presentation.<br />

All of the boys were there, with<br />

bells on, for the dinner and dance at<br />

the Elks Club at Union City. Charles<br />

Olivier as chairman of the reception<br />

committee covered himself with honor<br />

in keeping everything running<br />

smoothly. Before and after the dinner,<br />

there was dancing to the "Swanee<br />

Seranaders," led by Basil Frey.<br />

Sergeant Hickey presenting Captain<br />

W. Dutcher of the Marine Department<br />

with a loving cup which that department<br />

won in a membership drive of<br />

the West Side A.A.<br />

Among the notables of the association<br />

present were Chief J. D. Roosa,<br />

President; Charles Duval, Vice-President;<br />

Sergeant Hickey, Chairman of<br />

Athletics, and John Kriete, Assistant<br />

Chairman.<br />

Echoes of the bowling season in New York.


72 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

A<strong>TH</strong>LETIC ASSOCIATION OFFICERS IN ALBANY, INSTALLED MARCH 29<br />

First row, left to right—F. J. McDermott, G. R. Cole, J. Flood, G. Keegan, G. H.<br />

Farlow, Second Vice-President; F. J. Lyons, Treasurer. Middle row—H. Aldridge,<br />

E. H. Bowers, V. Burns, F. W. Jenkins, A. F. Stiglmeier, President; L. Tutein,<br />

Secretary; H. Gaige. Rear row—G. Freeley, S. E. Pratt, F. Whalen, J. G. Parsons,<br />

B. Van Derbilt, W. T. Doring, W. Steinbach.<br />

Card Party and Dance Given by<br />

I. H. B. at Hammond<br />

HE card party and dance given<br />

Tby the Indiana Harbor Belt Athletic<br />

Association at the Granada Ballroom<br />

at Hammond, Tuesday evening<br />

April 17, was by far the most successful<br />

party ever given by that Association.<br />

There were about 1,200<br />

members and their friends in attendance<br />

and a most enjoyable evening<br />

was spent at cards and dancing.<br />

A number of entertaining diversions<br />

were put on by members of the Association,<br />

among them accordion solos<br />

by Fritz Lempke, a member of the<br />

Water Service Department at Argo.<br />

Miss Josephine Buckley did some versatile<br />

dancing. Exhibition ballroom<br />

and eccentric dances were given by O.<br />

D. Charleston with Miss Mable Hansen<br />

as his partner. Mr. Charleston<br />

is a locomotive engineman on the Belt,<br />

working out of Blue Island, and when<br />

off duty he gives dancing instructions.<br />

Prizes for cards were awarded to<br />

Mrs. Ed Burns of Norpaul, Ida Taussig,<br />

Charles VanValkenberg, John<br />

Melcher, Mrs. J. B. Clark, Carrie Delaney,<br />

D. R. Taitt, Carl Brinckmann,<br />

Mrs. H. Lose, Pearl Wilson, H. J.<br />

Derner, Barney Kenny, Jr., and Miss<br />

Charlotte Crout.<br />

Among the guests were the Hon. A.<br />

E. Tinkham, Mayor of Hammond;<br />

Judge Martin A. Smith of the Criminal<br />

Court of Lake County; Benjamin<br />

Strong, Sheriff of Lake County; Arnold<br />

Kunert, City Clerk of Hammond,<br />

and John A. Gavit, New York Central<br />

Legal Representative in the district.<br />

A special train from Norpaul<br />

brought over a fine crowd from the<br />

outlying points.<br />

Ed Kinsey, chairman, was aided by<br />

the following committee: in charge<br />

of cards—Myron Stansbury, Carrie<br />

Delaney, Clare Prevo, Byron Downing<br />

and George Blummer; dancing—<br />

A. L. Crout, Mrs. Howard Westphal,<br />

Ethel Buckley and Laverne Prendergast;<br />

reception—James McGuire, Eddie<br />

Planer and Miss Mildred Jackson;<br />

transportation—O. A. Work.<br />

Tennis Invitation Gomes From<br />

Cleveland<br />

ROM time to time considerable agi­<br />

F tation arises from the ranks of a<br />

certain group of employes who take<br />

their tennis with the same seriousness<br />

as the baseball man takes his swattag<br />

and the golfer his elusive pellet.<br />

The latest rumble emanates from<br />

Cleveland, where E. R. Opperman,<br />

elected Director of Tennis for the<br />

Cleveland Athletic Association, forecasts<br />

a busy season for his court<br />

stars.<br />

Opperman, who is located with the<br />

Car Department at the Nottingham<br />

Car Shop, reports that indoor court<br />

practice during the months of April<br />

and May is doing much to round out<br />

the form of contestants, and inter-<br />

The Bowling Committee, responsible for the 1927 season which culminated in the tournament at Columbus, March 24. Left<br />

to right—W. S. Haley, Chairman, Executive Committee; C. E. Smith, Big Four; Carl H. Schneider, P. & E.; Fred T.<br />

Scharlau, Chicago Junction-Indiana Harbor Belt; H. W. Moler, Ohio Central, Chairman; H. W. Taylor, Supervisor of Athletics,<br />

New York Central; George H. West, Line East; C. H. Dayton, Michigan Central; William S. Baker, Special Assistant<br />

to Vice-President, Personnel; L. C. Roush, Line West; W. J. Lamb, P. & L. E.<br />

.Vric ) ork Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

departmental competition will shortly<br />

begin.<br />

11 would seem to be well worth<br />

while at this early stage of the game<br />

i" (•uiid out the possibilities of a few<br />

rontests between variously located<br />

Uhletic Associations with a view toward<br />

determining the tennis supremacy<br />

of the New York Central.<br />

This may be construed as an open<br />

invitation for the racket wielders to<br />

have their say. Should sufficient interest<br />

be shown, the sport will undoubtedly<br />

organize rapidly because of<br />

i In- deep enthusiasm that actuates its<br />

devotees.<br />

I rank Wenzel, Buffalo, Turns<br />

Professional<br />

IT won't be long before the Buffalo<br />

" baseball fans will be scanning the<br />

lm\ score of the major league to see<br />

how young Frank Wenzel is making<br />

out.<br />

This young man, who has played<br />

uilh the Seneca Yard Team in the<br />

New York Central Athletic Association<br />

League in Buffalo for the past<br />

two years, decided to take a chance at<br />

' he professional game and landed a<br />

berth with Connie Mack's Athletics.<br />

'Frankie," as he is called by the Buffalo<br />

fans, is considered the best<br />

catcher around Buffalo. He is a<br />

i lean-cut fellow with the best of<br />

habits, weighs about 180 pounds and<br />

can throw bases like a big leaguer,<br />

frankie has batted over 400 the past<br />

two seasons, and his Buffalo friends,<br />

• ho are numbered in the hundreds,<br />

are all pulling for him and hope to<br />

K him in the Athletics line-up before<br />

Die 1028 curtain rings down.<br />

The only feminine ten-pin team in the Pittsburgh District. Left to right, front row-<br />

Clara Phillips, Ann McCarthy, Mina Kunsman; second row—Mary Colabrese, Irene<br />

Neely, Warren J. Lamb, Sectional Committeeman, Dena Rovesti and Margaret<br />

Zimmerman.<br />

Athletic Associations of the New York<br />

Central Lines — March 1,1928<br />

NEW YORK CENTRAL, LINE EAST<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

West Side and Weehawken—J. D. Roosa,<br />

Chief of Police, President, New York City.<br />

Rep resentatives of the P. & L. E. at the bowling finals. Front row, left to right—<br />

Rob ert E. Pastre, Charles A. Freed, Albert Freed; back row—F. Gastner, Elmer H.<br />

Semler, Herman C. Rider.<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Manhattan—Thomas Bruder, President, Room<br />

518, 466 Lexington Avenue, New York City.<br />

» # #<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Brewster, N. Y.—Albro Travis, Sergeant of<br />

Police, President, Brewster, N. Y.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Albany, N. Y.—A. F. Stiglmeier, Foreman,<br />

Locomotive Shops, President, West Albany,<br />

N. Y.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Watertown, N. Y.—J. J. Hughes, Storekeeper,<br />

Engine House, President, Watertown, N. Y.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Ogdensburg, N. Y.—C. J. Chalk, Passenger<br />

Conductor, President, Ogdensburg, N. Y.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Syracuse, N. Y.—J. E. Cline, Leading Signal<br />

Maintainer, President, Syracuse, N. Y.<br />

New York Central-Fall Brook Association—<br />

C. N. Bacon, Agent, President, Corning, N. Y.<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Jersey Shore, Pa.—J. S. Vail, Train Master,<br />

President, Jersey Shore, Pa.<br />

New York Cent-al Athletic Association of<br />

Rochester, N. Y.—E. J. Rvkenbosr, Supervisor<br />

Bridges and Buildings, President, Rochester,<br />

N. Y.<br />

* # #<br />

New York Central Athletic Association c"<br />

Buffalo, N. Y.—Charles S. McGinley. President,<br />

care Assistant Freight Claim Agent,<br />

Buffalo, N. Y.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association o'<br />

Oswego, N. Y.—C. E. Olp. Superintendent,<br />

Ontario Division, President, Oswego, N. Y.<br />

* * *<br />

NEW YORK CENTRAL, LINE WEST<br />

New York Central Athletic Association o c<br />

Erie Division—A. B. Hyder, Chief Dispatcher<br />

President, Erie, Pa.<br />

» • • '<br />

New York Central Athletic Association oi<br />

Ashtabula, Ohio—J. O. McGoev. Safety Agent.


At the third annual basketball tournament, which took place in the Cleveland Public Auditorium, March 10. In the front row are the sectional committeemen and other officials, 5l<br />

and behind them, in order, the Detroit men's and Detroit and Cleveland girls' teams, the Cleveland Glee Club, and the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie and Collinwood bands. §


York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Franklin Division, President, Ashtabula, Ohio.<br />

* # #<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Alliance Division—G. M. Broker, Road Foreman<br />

of Engines, President, Minerva, Ohio.<br />

* * »<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Cleveland, Ohio—J. W. Senger, Superintendent<br />

of Rolling Stock, President, Cleveland, Ohio,<br />

i • i<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Sandusky, Ohio—Charles F. W. Thiem, Agent,<br />

President, Sandusky, Ohio.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Toledo, Ohio—T. W. Pleis, President, care<br />

Assistant General Freight Agent, Toledo, Ohio.<br />

* • • •<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Adrian, Mich.—Emil Erickson, General Foreman,<br />

Car Department, President, Adrian, Mich.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Lansing Division—G. O. Brott, Conductor,<br />

President, Hillsdale, Mich.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Elkhart, Ind.—R. C. Salyer, General Car Foreman,<br />

President, Elkhart, Ind.<br />

* * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

South Bend, Ind.—W. H. Noell, General Yard<br />

Master, President, South Bend, Ind.<br />

* * #<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Illinois Division—F. T. Miller, Chief Clerk to<br />

Train Master, President, Kankakee, 111.<br />

* # •it-<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Chicago, 111.—C. E. Dilger, President, LaSalle<br />

Street Station, Chicago, HI.<br />

* * »<br />

OHIO CENTRAL LINES<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Columbus, Ohio—H. T. Wilson, Train Master,<br />

President, Columbus, Ohio.<br />

* » *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Bucyrus, Ohio—Bruce Sharrock, Maintenance<br />

of Equipment Department, President, Bucyrus,<br />

Ohio. * * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Charleston, W. Va.—I. B. Chadwick, Superintendent,<br />

<strong>Southern</strong> Division, President, Charleston,<br />

W. Va. * * *<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Hobson, Ohio—R. W. Nutting, Train Master,<br />

President, Hobson, Ohio.<br />

* * #<br />

New York Central Athletic Association of<br />

Toledo (O. C.)—W. L. Houghton, General<br />

Foreman, Whitmore Shops, President, East Toledo,<br />

Ohio. * * *<br />

CHICAGO JUNCTION<br />

Chicago Junction Athletic Association—S.<br />

M. Doheny, President, care General Manager,<br />

Chicago, 111. * * *<br />

INDIANA HARBOR BELT<br />

Indiana Harbor Belt Athletic Association—<br />

W. R. Manning, Chief Special Agent, President,<br />

Hammond, Ind.<br />

* * *<br />

BIG FOUR RAILWAY<br />

Big Four Athletic Association of Cleveland,<br />

Ohio—E. D. Greaves, President, care General<br />

Yard Master, Linndale, Ohio.<br />

* » *<br />

Big Four Athletic and Social Club—F. J.<br />

Schwab, President, care Division Freight Agent,<br />

Columbus, Ohio. * • *<br />

Big Four Athletic Association of Bellefontaine,<br />

Ohio—H. A. Cooney, President, care<br />

Motive Power Department, Big Four <strong>Railway</strong>,<br />

Belief ontaine, Ohio.<br />

* * »<br />

Big Four Social and Athletic Association,<br />

Springfield, Ohio—P. H. Eisenmenger, City<br />

Ticket Agent, President, Springfield, Ohio.<br />

» * #<br />

Big Four Athletic Association of Cincinnati,<br />

Ohio—T. G. Steinfield, President, care General<br />

Manager's office, Cincinnati, Ohio.<br />

* » #<br />

Big Four Athletic Association of Indianapolis,<br />

Ind.—M. O. Parker, President, care General<br />

Superintendent's office, Indianapolis, Ind.<br />

* # •<br />

Big Four Athletic Association of Mt. Carmel,<br />

111.—Martin Fredrich, Machinist, President, Mt.<br />

Carmel, 111. . » *<br />

New York Central Lines Booster and Athletic<br />

Association of Danville, 111.—C. R. Maher,<br />

Brakeman, President, Lyons Yards, Danville<br />

III. * * *<br />

Big Four Athletic Association of Mattoon,<br />

III.—J. U. Barton, Chief Clerk to Superintendent,<br />

President, Mattoon, 111.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

<strong>TH</strong>OSE WHO ASSISTED IN <strong>TH</strong>E N.Y.C.A.A. OF TOLEDO BOXING SHOW<br />

Left to right, front row—Kayo Grau, Chet Erskine, Jimmy Katz, Tony Lupica,<br />

George Hart, Tommy Griffith. Kayo Morgan. Back row, standing—George Brown,<br />

Announcer, Johnny Lewis, Lefty Farmer, Eddie Poitinger, Mickey Nelson, Billy<br />

O'Brien Phil Meccurrio, Teddy White, George Lewis, Referee, and F. C. Stellmacher,<br />

Chairman, Boxing Commission.<br />

CINCINNATI NOR<strong>TH</strong>ERN<br />

Cincinnati Northern Athletic Association—<br />

Joseph Saltzgaber, Machinist, President, Van<br />

Wert, Ohio.<br />

. * *<br />

PEORIA & EASTERN<br />

P. & E. A. A. of Urbana, 111.—L. J. Wiegand.<br />

Foreman, Car Department, President,<br />

Urbana, 111.<br />

* » *<br />

P. & E. A. A. of Indianapolis, Ind.—P. P.<br />

Ilelmick, President, care Auditor, Indianapolis,<br />

Ind.<br />

* * *<br />

MICHIGAN CENTRAL<br />

Michigan Central Athletic Association of<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> Division—E. R. Burgess, Clerk, Engineering<br />

Department, President, St. Thomas,<br />

Ont.<br />

* » *<br />

Michigan Central Athletic Association of<br />

Detroit. Mich.—Robert Barrie, President, Room<br />

426, Michigan Central Station, Detroit, Mich.<br />

. . .<br />

Michigan Central Athletic Association of<br />

Toledo, Ohio—E. Martin, Car Department,<br />

President, North Toledo, Ohio.<br />

* * »<br />

Michigan Central Athletic Association of<br />

Jackson, Mich.—E. F. Behan, President, care<br />

Chief Dispatcher's office, Jackson Junction,<br />

Mich.<br />

* * »<br />

Michigan Central Athletic Association of<br />

Marshall, Mich.—N. L. Butler, Car Department,<br />

Marshall Shops, President, Marshall,<br />

Mich.<br />

» * »<br />

Michigan Central Athletic Association of<br />

Niles, Mich.—Oliver Lee, Clerk, Locomotive<br />

Department, President, Niles, Mich.<br />

* . *<br />

Michigan Central Athletic Association of<br />

Northern Division—H. M. Hayes. President,<br />

care Division Engineer, Bay City, Mich.<br />

* * .<br />

PITTSBURGH & LAKE ERIE<br />

P. & L. E. A. A. of Ohio Division—C. H.<br />

Clark, Signal Department, President, New<br />

Castle Junction, Pa. * * *<br />

P. & L. E. A. A. of Pittsburgh Division—<br />

II. W. Loughridge, Foreman, Motive Power<br />

Department, President, McKees Rocks, Pa.<br />

* * *<br />

P. & L. E. A. A. of Youghiogheny Division<br />

—S. W. Inks, General Foreman, Motive Power<br />

Department, President, Dickerson Run, Pa.<br />

. . .<br />

P. & L. E. A. A. of Monongahela Division—<br />

Richard Simpson, Timekeeper, Car Shops,<br />

President, Newell, Pa.<br />

* » *<br />

Office of Special Assistant to Vice-<br />

I'nsident Personnel, Room, 1008,<br />

ilni iid Central Terminal, New York<br />

City.<br />

L<br />

Toledo Boxers Score Success<br />

EA<strong>TH</strong>ER pushers of the New<br />

York Central Athletic Association<br />

of Toledo, on the night of March 29,<br />

furnished considerable entertainment<br />

for 600 members and guests of that<br />

body at the third annual boxing show.<br />

F. C. Stellmacher, who headed the<br />

committee on arrangements, bemoaned<br />

the fact that although he had issued<br />

challenges to any Association west of<br />

Buffalo which thought it could produce<br />

box-fighters of Toledo calibre,<br />

his efforts proved unavailing. However,<br />

he and his stable are still of the<br />

same mind and any aspiring railroader<br />

spoiling for fight can make arrangements<br />

with him by addressing<br />

him in care of the New York Central,<br />

Air Line Junction, Ohio.<br />

Lefty Farmer, Switchman, Air Line Junction<br />

Yard, fought a four-round draw with Mickey<br />

Nelson, Terminal Athletic Club, at 140 pounds.<br />

Chet Erskine, Switchman at Air Line Junction,<br />

received decision over Kayo Grau from<br />

Terminal Athletic Club, at 115 pounds.<br />

Kayo Morgan, Terminal Athletic Club, defeated<br />

Jimmy Katz, of the same club, in a fourround<br />

comedy bout, at 110 pounds.<br />

Tommy Griffith, Switchman, Air Line Junction,<br />

fought a four-round draw with George<br />

Hart, Terminal Athletic Club, at 140 pounds.<br />

Eddie Poitinger, Switchman, Air Line Junction,<br />

received a shade decision over Billy<br />

O'Brien, Terminal Athletic Club, in a fourround<br />

bout, at 150 pounds.<br />

Johnny Lewis, Switchman at Air Line Junction,<br />

received a decision over Phil Meccurrio,<br />

Terminal Athletic Club, in a six-round semifinal<br />

bout, at 140 pounds.<br />

In the main event Teddy White,<br />

New York Central Policeman, defeated<br />

Kid Birmingham of the Terminal<br />

Athletic Club, in a six-round<br />

bout at 130 pounds.<br />

The committee staging the bouts<br />

consisted of F. C. Stellmacher, chairman;<br />

Ira McClaren, E. C. Home,<br />

Teddy White, E. J. Troitke and Lieut.<br />

Runge.<br />

The bowling team of the New York Central Athletic Association of Albany, which<br />

captured the Line East title, was a strong contender at the Columbus finals and<br />

rounded out a busy season by bowling regularly in the Albany City League.<br />

Standing, from left to right, M. Loftus, Ed Lubner and J. McCorry. Front row,<br />

John Loebig, Al Stiglmeier, M. Kantorchi and C. Hallett. Charlie Hallett, Jr., Is<br />

the mascot behind the center pin.<br />

75


76 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

ENTERING the ranks of the Go-Getters this month with twenty-one Traffic<br />

J<br />

- 1<br />

Tips recorded, the Pittsburgh & Lake Erie Railroad is following a good<br />

lead and setting a worthy example for other roads of the New York Central<br />

Lines. The Rutland Railroad, which only a few months ago began using the<br />

Traffic Tip cards which are enclosed in every Magazine, this month has a<br />

list of eighteen. Michigan Central and Indiana Harbor Belt employes likewise<br />

are getting new business by this method, one name from each appearing<br />

in this month's Magazine.<br />

Go-Getters are growing every month, and it is this interest in their Company<br />

which is making the employes of increased value to the New York Central,<br />

and the Railroad a greater asset to the employes.<br />

Below are given the names of some of those who, through personal effort<br />

in the past month, have procured new business for the road:<br />

MOHAWK DIVISION<br />

Fred Nue, Interchange Clerk, Utica.<br />

D. V. Schermerhorn, Night Yard Master,<br />

Utica.<br />

J. W. Moiling, Freight Conductor, Utica.<br />

R. J. Morton, General Yard Master, Utica.<br />

J. E. Williams, Yard Conductor, Utica.<br />

E. C. Cross, General Yard Master, Troy.<br />

H. A. Bennett, General Foreman, West Albany<br />

Transfer.<br />

J. H. Miller, Checker, West Albany Transfer.<br />

H. D. Evans, Car Inspector, Selkirk.<br />

G. A. Hynes (3), Clerk, Rotterdam Junction.<br />

H. B. Shannon, Assistant Foreman, West<br />

Albany.<br />

C. B. Van O'Linda (11), Checker, Amsterdam.<br />

E. J. Maroney (14), Foreman, Amsterdam.<br />

J. F. MacNulty, Rate Clerk, DFA office,<br />

Albany.<br />

G. Lewis, Car Department, Albany.<br />

F. T. Shockley (2), Freight Agent, Canajoharie.<br />

W. H. Groff (2), Chief Clerk, Freight office,<br />

Canajoharie.<br />

C. H. Frank (2), Rate Clerk, Freight office,<br />

Canajoharie.<br />

Guy C. Sheffer (4), Chief Clerk, Freight office,<br />

Schenectady.<br />

W. C. Davey (7), Freight Agent. Schenectady.<br />

W. E. Dietz (11), Receiving Clerk, Freight<br />

House, Albany.<br />

James Casey (13), Clerk, Freight House, Albany.<br />

J. J. Kelley (2), Receiving Clerk, Freight<br />

House, Albany.<br />

E. G. Harrison (2), Rate Clerk, Freight<br />

office, Troy.<br />

Sigmund Orner (5), Welder, Shop, West Albany.<br />

A. J. Gehring (4), Freight Agent, Fonda.<br />

J. H. Rogers (3), Car Foreman, Rotterdam<br />

Junction.<br />

W. J. Pindar (3), Yard Clerk. Selkirk.<br />

H. C. Christiance, Car Repairman, Fonda.<br />

R. A. Wiley. Apprentice, Rotterdam Junction.<br />

C. Betts, Car Shops, West Albany.<br />

J. Schmidtbauer, Car Shops, West Albany.<br />

P. V. Whipple, Assistant Engineer Dispatcher,<br />

Selkirk.<br />

N. D. Hyde, Assistant Engineer, Albany.<br />

J. W. Gilligan, Car Department, Troy.<br />

D. Fitzgerald, Rate Clerk, Freight office, Albany.<br />

T. Humphrey, Yard Clerk, Schenectady.<br />

J. J. Batte. Freight Agent, St. Johnsville.<br />

Geo. A. Robertson, Pensioned Conductor, Eastwood.<br />

J. E. Farmer, Clerk, Freight House, Rome.<br />

William Irish, General Foreman, Rome.<br />

OTTAWA DIVISION<br />

J. E. Blais (3), Agent, Embrun, Ont.<br />

C. S. Brydges, Agent. St. Albert, Ont.<br />

C. S. Brown (4), Yard Master, Moira, N. Y.<br />

ADIRONDACK DIVISION<br />

J. K. Brown (2), Superintendent, Utica. N. Y.<br />

Frances Schiffer, Acting Ticket Agent, Saranac<br />

Lake, N. Y.<br />

J. A. Auger, Agent. Loon Lake, N. Y.<br />

G. B. Shannon. Assistant Foreman, Car Department,<br />

Malone. N. Y.<br />

W. A. Pulling (3), Agent, Raquette Lake,<br />

N. Y.<br />

ST. LAWRENCE DIVISION<br />

L. A. Smith. Operator, Remsen, N. Y.<br />

H. J. LaRock, Chief Clerk, Freight Agent<br />

office, Ogdensburg, N. Y.<br />

C. W. Bowdish, Operator, Lyons Falls. N. Y.<br />

Hattie E. Lewis (2), Stenographer, DFA<br />

office, Watertown, N. Y.<br />

Marcia E. Hughes, Telephone Operator, Watertown,<br />

N. Y.<br />

C. Hayden. Agent, Sackets Harbor. N. Y.<br />

H. O. Lambert, Car Inspector, Huntingdon,<br />

Que.<br />

A. Tremblay, Agent, Valleyfield. Que.<br />

Charlebois, Clerk, Freight office, Valleyfield,<br />

A. E. Gaboury. Agent. Beauharnois. Que.<br />

S. D. Popeck. Agent. Huntingdon, Que.<br />

SYRACUSE DIVISION<br />

F. ^W.^Shayes, Freight Agent, East Rochester,<br />

Mrs. M. C. Quinn, Freight Agent, Montezuma,<br />

N. Y.<br />

C. L. Mather, Chief Clerk, Newark, N. Y.<br />

G. B. Storms, Clerk, Palmyra, N. Y.<br />

S. Hulchanski, Fireman, Dewitt.<br />

B. W. Eaton, Telegraph Leverman, Fairport.<br />

F. W. Gray, Telegraph Clerk, Syracuse.<br />

John F. Bowers, Passenger Brakeman, Syracuse.<br />

H. W. Tuck (2), Agent, Manlius.<br />

R. N. Lighthall, Clerk, Accounting Bureau,<br />

Syracuse.<br />

Patrick Russell, Receiving Clerk, Syracuse.<br />

John F. Nash, Clerk, Syracuse.<br />

P. J. Considine, Clerk, Syracuse.<br />

A. G. Osborn, Head Adjustment Clerk, DFAB,<br />

Syracuse.<br />

E. F. Brown, Conductor, Batavia.<br />

E. H. Koch, Derrick Engineer, Batavia.<br />

ERIE DIVISION<br />

R. J. O'Brien (2), Freight Agent, Harbor<br />

Creek, Pa.<br />

C. J. Reed (2), Freight Agent, Falconer, N. Y.<br />

(Valley Branch).<br />

M. K. Leone, Freight Agent, Laona, N. Y.<br />

(Valley Branch).<br />

V. F. Keirnan, Freight Agent, North Warren,<br />

Pa. (Valley Branch).<br />

W. C. Dalrymple, Freight Agent, Warren, Pa.<br />

(Valley Branch).<br />

F. Schmatz, Rate Clerk to Freight Agent,<br />

Dunkirk, N. Y. (Valley Branch).<br />

ONTARIO DIVISION<br />

A. C". Albright (4), Freight Agent, Model<br />

City, N. Y.<br />

R. J. Knapp (2), Agent, Camden, N. Y.<br />

L. A. Seyer, Agent, Maple View, N. Y.<br />

G. H. Graham, Operator, Ontario, N. Y.<br />

J. D. Griggs, Telegrapher, Red Creek, N. Y.<br />

C. L. Davis. Agent. Fulton, N. Y.<br />

H. R. McGrath (3), Agent, Oswego, N. Y.<br />

BUFFALO DIVISION<br />

J. ^G. Townsend (2), Freight Agent, Harriet,<br />

J. A. Cole, Foreman, Freight House, Suspension<br />

Bridge, N. Y.<br />

J. A. Sands, DFCA, Buffalo.<br />

E. ^S.^Stevens (3), Freight Agent, Lewiston,<br />

J. E. Hartnett, Rate Clerk, Louisiana Street<br />

Station, Buffalo.<br />

M. A. North, Relief Yard Master, Belt Line,<br />

Buffalo.<br />

F. J. Cowley, General Yard Master, Seneca<br />

Yard.<br />

(J. ri. Mcuonougn, westbound Clerk, Louisiana<br />

Street, Buffalo.<br />

H. W. Bowen, Clerk. DFA office. Buffalo.<br />

F. O. Bernhard, Inspector, DFCA office,<br />

Buffalo.<br />

J. J. Dinger, Outbound Clerk, Carroll Street<br />

Station, Buffalo.<br />

J. C. Waterstran, Brakeman, Buffalo.<br />

G. A. Dabell, Freight Agent, Erie Street Station,<br />

Buffalo.<br />

J. H. Root, DFA. Buffalo.<br />

F. J. Lazarus, Chief Clerk to Freight Agent,<br />

Harriet.<br />

C. Rugg, Clerk, Carroll Street Station, Buffalo.<br />

F. Forsyth, General Foreman, Louisiana Street,<br />

Buffalo.<br />

A. A. Ganley. Inspector for DFCA office.<br />

Buffalo. Niagara Falls.<br />

James O'Connell, Chief Engineer, West Shore,<br />

East Buffalo.<br />

F. E. Root, Pensioner. Springville. N. Y.<br />

Eugene W. Frank, Draftsman, Signal Department,<br />

Buffalo.<br />

Otto Mayers, Sergeant of Police, Buffalo.<br />

Charles F. Barth (2), Clerk, Information Bureau.<br />

Buffalo.<br />

F. J. Specht. Yard Conductor, East Buffalo.<br />

Godfrey Cook, Pensioned Draftsman, Buffalo.<br />

ROCHESTER DIVISION<br />

Mildred Bauer, Clerk, Kent Street, Rochester.<br />

Traffic" Campaign<br />

Harold E. Caldwell, Clerk, Kent Street, Rochester.<br />

J. H. Cleverly, Electrician, Rochester.<br />

F. W. Consaul (2), Head Rate Clerk, Rochester.<br />

Reed Dettman, Yard Brakeman, Rochester.<br />

George Dye (4), Fireman, Rochester.<br />

Fred J. Grau, Clerk, State Street, Rochester.<br />

C. N. Hardy, Fireman, Rochester.<br />

J. I. King (2) Retired Fireman, Rochester.<br />

J. W. O'Hara, General Foreman, Kent Street,<br />

Rochester.<br />

George H. Reese, Foreman, Portland Avenue,<br />

Rochester.<br />

D. W. Walrath (3), Freight Agent, Rochester.<br />

G. B. Whelehan, Information Clerk, Rochester.<br />

S. C. Forshee (4), Signal Maintainer, Auburn,<br />

N. Y.<br />

W. J. Graney. Freight Agent. Geneva. N. Y.<br />

G. W. Wilson (4), Freight Agent, Seneca<br />

Falls, N. Y.<br />

D. F. Sheehan, Freight Agent, Waterloo, N. Y.<br />

J. J. Morrissey (2), Rate Clerk to Freight<br />

Agent, Medina, N. Y.<br />

E. O. Canham, Freight Agent, Eagle Harbor,<br />

N. Y.<br />

A. Foreman (2), Freight House Foreman,<br />

Medina, N. Y.<br />

N. M. Miller, Stenographer to Freight Agent,<br />

Medina, N. Y.<br />

H. J. Snyder (2), Cashier to Freight Agent,<br />

Medina, N. Y.<br />

G. H. Butts, Freight Agent, LeRoy, N. Y.<br />

Sara Horner (2), Pensioned Employe, Geneva,<br />

N. Y.<br />

W. J. Guilfoil. Tracing Clerk, Kent Street,<br />

Rochester.<br />

J. P. Samson, LeRoy, N. Y.<br />

RIVER DIVISION<br />

E. K. Costello, Signalman. Coxsackie, N. Y.<br />

J. A. Smith, Chief Clerk, Weehawken, N. J.<br />

F. J. May (3). Clerk, DFAB, Weehawken.<br />

R. M. Hays (3), Clerk, DFAB, Weehawken.<br />

T. R. Ivers (51), Clerk, DFAB, Weehawken,<br />

N. J.<br />

L. C. Oettinger (6), Clerk, DFAB, Weehawken,<br />

M. R. Cowell, Clerk, DFAB, Weehawken, N. J.<br />

C. D. Smith, Foreman, Newburgh, N. Y.<br />

A. Malo, Chief Eastbound Clerk, Weehawken,<br />

HUDSON DIVISION<br />

D. O'Connell, Agent, Poughkeepsie, N. Y.<br />

R. S. Preston, Chief Clerk. Beacon, N. Y.<br />

Albert Rospoksky, Car Inspector, Harmon,<br />

N. Y.<br />

A. McTish, Clerk, Hastings-on-Hudson, N. Y.<br />

PENNSYLVANIA DIVISION<br />

B. E. Bottorf, Clerk, Philipsburg, Pa.<br />

C. J. Long, Operator, Lock Haven, Pa.<br />

HARLEM DIVISION<br />

G. A. Stripline, Agent, Dover Plains, N. Y.<br />

PUTNAM DIVISION<br />

A. Dunning, Agent, Yorktown Heights, N. Y.<br />

NEW YORK DISTRICT<br />

C. F. Muller (2), Clerk, AR office,.<br />

W. E. Barnum, Clerk, AR office.<br />

W. H. Lea (6), Clerk, AR office.<br />

A. B. Colpitts (5), Clerk, AR office.<br />

L. C. Wright (6), Clerk, AR office.<br />

J. Fitting, Jr. (3), Chief Clerk, AR office.<br />

J. S. Joseph, Traveling Auditor, AR office.<br />

A. V. Dube (4), Clerk, AR office.<br />

T. J. Fitzgerald, Clerk, AR office.<br />

J. W. Savage, Clerk, AR office.<br />

Lillian Trevorah (14), Stenographer, AR office.<br />

-Betty Hallahan (16), Stenographer, AR office.<br />

Louise Shreve (10), Stenographer, AR office.<br />

E. W. Kinsley (3), Head Clerk, AR office.<br />

Bessie Coon, Clerk, APA office.<br />

J. H. Smith, Clerk, APA office.<br />

Mrs. E. G. Kenny (3), Clerk, APA office.<br />

C. S. Kelly (2), Clerk. APA office.<br />

L. M. Reynolds (4), Head Clerk. APA office.<br />

W. T. Ryan, Clerk, Office of Special Investigator<br />

of Law Department.<br />

R. E. Sugden, Clerk, Office of Terminal Engineer.<br />

W. E. Malott, Clerk, Office of Designing Engineer.<br />

G. Pleska. Brakeman, Grand Central Terminal.<br />

D. Mulcahy, Arrival Clerk, Thirtv-third Street.<br />

O. W. Bender (20), Clerk. DFAB, Sixtieth<br />

Street.<br />

J. Moran (2), General Foreman, Wallabout<br />

Station.<br />

Ed Mortimer, Assistant Chief Clerk, Westchester<br />

Avenue Station.<br />

J. A. Joyce (2), Assistant Agent, Westchester<br />

Avenue Station.<br />

W. T. Stevenson, Assistant DFCA.<br />

A. Kinney (4). Agent, Barclay Street.<br />

William Fricker, Agent, Consolidated Ticket<br />

office.<br />

W. J. O'Day. Clerk. GEFA office.<br />

K. Beetson (Miss). Stenographer, GEFA office.<br />

E. C. Laurie. Stenographer, EDA office.<br />

.Vi•.(• York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

V. J. Gardner, Chief Clerk, Wallabout Station.<br />

William Kuhtmann (2), Westbound Foreman,<br />

St. John's Park.<br />

K. W. Dean, Agent, Thirty-third Street.<br />

C. Wilson, Chief Clerk, Pier 23 N.R.<br />

James Ross (2), Receiving Clerk, Pier 83 N.R.<br />

A. C. Rudolf (2), Manager Division Bureau,<br />

General Freight office.<br />

W. L. Rohm, General Grain Clerk.<br />

OFF-LINE TERRITORY<br />

J. A. McAlister, Tie Inspector, Pontotoc, Miss.<br />

OHIO DIVISION<br />

C. H. Neuman (2), Agent, New Winchester,<br />

Ohio.<br />

K. L. Cherry, Agent, Granville, Ohio.<br />

M. Springer, Assistant Chief Clerk, Columbus,<br />

Ohio.<br />

H. E. Speaks, General Superintendent, Columbus,<br />

Ohio.<br />

A. G. Whiteleather, Agent, Dunkirk, Ohio.<br />

C. E. Glassford, Agent, Kenton, Ohio.<br />

V. L. France, Agent, Mt. Perry, Ohio.<br />

J. A. White, Agent, Thornville, Ohio.<br />

J. A. Kunc, Agent, South Zanesville, Ohio.<br />

L. A. Millo, Brakeman, Bucyrus, Ohio.<br />

V. H. Pyers, Agent, Lime City, Ohio.<br />

I. J. Ryan, General Yard Master, Corning,<br />

Ohio.<br />

H. W. Moler, District Accountant, Columbus,<br />

Ohio.<br />

SOU<strong>TH</strong>ERN DIVISION<br />

A. C. Hair (2), Agent, Belle, W. Va.<br />

W. H. Plummer (4), Agent, Rutland, Ohio.<br />

L. D. Smith (5), Agent, Nitro, W. Va.<br />

J. C. Day (2), Chief Clerk to Agent, Charleston,<br />

W. Va.<br />

W. E. Frasch, Transitman, Charleston, W. Va.<br />

S. O. Pickens (3), Agent, Buffalo, W. Va.<br />

Ross Thomas (3), Clerk, Agent's office, Cedar<br />

Grove, W. Va.<br />

J. S. Dilger, Agent, Watts Street, W. Va.<br />

Gail Faires, Clerk, Agent's office, Glouster,<br />

Ohio.<br />

J. A. Shaver (3), Agent, Dunbar. W. Va.<br />

II. B. Wolfe (2), General Warehouse Foreman,<br />

Charleston, W. Va.<br />

L. M. Kryder, Agent, Gauley Bridge, W. Va.<br />

S. C. French, Rate Clerk, Agent's office,<br />

Charleston, W. Va.<br />

E G. Reed, Agricultural Agent, Columbus.<br />

J. A. McLaughlin (2), Relief Agent, Charleston,<br />

W. Va.<br />

F. W. Dixon. Agent, Dickinson, W. Va.<br />

C. E. Midkiff, Clerk, Yard office, Charleston,<br />

W. Va.<br />

W. W. Brown, Conductor, Hobson. Ohio.<br />

T. S. Richardson, Agent, Charleston, W. Va.<br />

S. S. Underwood. Agent. Trimble. Ohio.<br />

L. P. Kuhn (2), Agent, Raymond City, W. Va.<br />

W. S. Peck, Agent, West Charleston, W. Va.<br />

C. O. Parsons (2), Agent, Boomer, W. Va.<br />

N. Hoffman, Agent, Cannelton, W. Va.<br />

CLEVELAND DIVISION<br />

E. A. Ward, Clerk, DFCA. Cleveland.<br />

W. H. Muraney, Clerk, DFCA, Cleveland.<br />

W. F. Horner (3), Freight Claim Adjustor,<br />

DFCA, Cleveland.<br />

W. A. Miller, Clerk, DFA, Cleveland.<br />

Anne Plazek, Stenographer, DFA, Cleveland.<br />

S. A. Lytle (3), Pensioner. Cleveland.<br />

W. G. Ryan (5), Clerk, DFA, Cleveland.<br />

R. J. Fitzgerald, Adjustor Clerk, DFA, Cleveland.<br />

J. H. Kwochka, Head Clerk, DFA, Cleveland.<br />

Irwin Wolfe (3), Clerk, GRA, Cleveland.<br />

W. H. Shaw. Clerk, GRA, Cleveland.<br />

Mary Montgomery, Clerk. GRA, Cleveland.<br />

H. C. Dubrau, Clerk. GRA. Cleveland.<br />

R. J. Knechtges, Clerk, GRA, Cleveland.<br />

Martha Dennis (2), Clerk, AFA, Cleveland.<br />

Charles Bell, Yard Master, Cleveland.<br />

F. L. Stevens, Claim Agent, Cleveland.<br />

J. C. Barnes, Draftsman, Cleveland.<br />

J. R. Hawkins (2), Rate Clerk, GRA, Cleveland.<br />

W. M. Schad, Yard Clerk, Cleveland.<br />

F. L. Lengs, Clerk, AFA, Cleveland.<br />

P. J. Echle, Valuation Engineer, Cleveland.<br />

Miss Meta Koncana, Law Department, Cleveland.<br />

Roy I. Stine (2), Assistant Foreman, Cleveland.<br />

. .<br />

Grace Kelling. Stenographer, Superintendent<br />

Telegraph, Cleveland.<br />

Carl Hoglund, Clerk, Collinwood.<br />

G E. Larick, Yard Conductor, Collinwood.<br />

Frank Comerford (4), Clerk, Freight Agent,<br />

Cleveland.<br />

W. O. Frei, Chief Clerk, Freight Agent, Cleveland.<br />

' , , .<br />

H. E. Will (3), Chief Clerk, Freight Agent,<br />

Sandusky.<br />

C E. Baker. Freight Agent. Amherst.<br />

A. Forbes, Yard Clerk, Elyria.<br />

N A. Wortman (2). Freight Agent, Elmore.<br />

Delia A. D. Starks (2), Bill Clerk, Freight Agent.<br />

C. Clyde. W,<br />

.<br />

A D. Strong, Freight Agent, Clyde.<br />

C. W. Bell, Freight Agent, Bellevue.<br />

E. M. Knowles, Freight Agent, Oberlin.<br />

Dave Minderman, Yard Clerk, Point Clinton.<br />

W. H. Eastwood (2), Freight Agent, Vermilion.<br />

M. W. Thornburg, Freight Agent, Berea.<br />

Minnie Sunday, Clerk, Freight Agent, Bellevue.<br />

E. E. Garner, Assistant Agent, So. Lorain.<br />

Erwin Dunmir (2), Chief Clerk, Freight Agent,<br />

Oak Harbor.<br />

John Hawk, Yard Clerk, Clyde.<br />

Carl Ketchum, Freight Agent, Wakeman.<br />

C. E. Lowery, Freight Agent, Monroeville.<br />

O. L. Walker, Ticket Agent, Oberlin.<br />

E. F. Fleckner, Freight Agent, La Carne.<br />

ALLIANCE DIVISION<br />

R. W. Lemon, Freight Agent, Piney Fork.<br />

H. E. Ruggles, Freight Agent, Alliance, Ohio.<br />

ERIE DIVISION<br />

G. D. Bovee, Freight Agent, Swanville.<br />

George Sennett (2), Freight Agent, Painesville,<br />

Ohio.<br />

Kenneth Stillwell, Yard Clerk, Erie, Pa.<br />

E. M. Alwens, Clerk, Freight Agent, Erie, Pa.<br />

C. G. Thompson, Chief Clerk, Freight Agent,<br />

Conneaut, Ohio.<br />

Miss K. M. Finucane, Clerk, Freight Agent,<br />

Erie, Pa.<br />

C. L. Tyrell, Freight Agent, North Girard, Pa.<br />

W. F. Pope, Clerk, Superintendent, Erie, Pa.<br />

Frank Wenkoski, Clerk, Freight Agent, Erie.<br />

F. C. Harrington, Train Master, Erie, Pa.<br />

William A. Ims, Demurrage Clerk, Erie, Pa.<br />

G. A. Cone, Freight Agent, Erie, Pa.<br />

TOLEDO DIVISION<br />

W. C. Prang, Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

Mildred Bierbaum, Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

Mollie Hackett (4), Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

Lola C. Fisher, Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

F. C. Holtz (2), DFA, Toledo.<br />

Mrs. Helen Dahmen, Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

H. W. Hanford, Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

Caroline Tigges (3), Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

Gertrude L. Bodie, Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

Hazel O'Dell (105), Clerk, DFAB, Toledo.<br />

Charles W. Baker, Operator-Clerk, Millersburg.<br />

Marcella Kehoe, Clerk, Toledo.<br />

W. E. Rose, Ticket Seller, Findlay, Ohio.<br />

L. V. Lohner, Traveling Freight Agent, Toledo.<br />

M. G. Givins, Assistant Agent, Wagon Works,<br />

C. J. Sullivan, Assistant Agent, West Toledo.<br />

A. J. Bendlin, Clerk, Freight House, Toledo.<br />

R. J. Gates (3), Agent, Freight House,<br />

Wauseon, Ohio.<br />

Blanch Gates (8), Clerk, Freight House,<br />

Wauseon, Ohio.<br />

H. W. Horn, Clerk, AGFA, Detroit, Mich.<br />

M. R. Bowerman, Clerk, AGFA, Detroit, Mich.<br />

T. J. McCarthy, Clerk, Local Office, Toledo.<br />

LANSING DIVISION<br />

G. H. Deal, Agent, Freight Department,<br />

Springport, Mich.<br />

C. S. Brooks. Operator, Freight Department,<br />

Pleasant Lake, Ind.<br />

MICHIGAN DIVISION<br />

A. V. Ives, Agent, Freight House, Shipshewana,<br />

Ind.<br />

P. T. Cosgrove, Chief Clerk, Freight House,<br />

Adrian, Mich.<br />

H. Callahan, Cashier, Adrian, Mich.<br />

M. H. Finisy, Agent. Adrian, Mich.<br />

Mr. Eldredge, Rate Clerk. Adrian, Mich.<br />

W. M. Drury, Agent, Coldwater, Mich.<br />

WESTERN DIVISION<br />

Lloyd L. Abblett (2), c/o Agent, Gibson, Ind.<br />

H. L. Ambre, Chief Clerk, Agent, Gibson, Ind.<br />

Miss Loretta Bock (2), c/o Agent, Gibson,<br />

Harold Buhring, c/o Agent, Gibson, Ind.<br />

Walter Chapman, Air Brakeman Helper, Englewood.<br />

111.<br />

H. P. Clemens, Chief Clerk, WDA. Chicago.<br />

Earl Dexter, Clerk B. Tariff Bureau, Chicago.<br />

J. J. Edsall, Assistant Foreman, Car Shop,<br />

Elkhart.<br />

W. O. Ferguson (4), Manager, Taylor Street<br />

Warehouse, Chicago.<br />

S G. Foster, Car Clerk, South Bend.<br />

R. W. Hart, Chief Clerk. GFA. Chicago.<br />

A. W. Hathaway (2), Agent, Mishawaka, Ind.<br />

C. D. Horton, Agent, South Bend.<br />

W. L. Jones, Clerk, General Agent, South<br />

Bend. _ .<br />

M. F. Keane, Agent, Elyria, Ohio.<br />

Daniel Kelleher, Yard Clerk, C. J. House No.<br />

3, Chicago.<br />

Samuel Langden, Clerk, Agent, Mishawaka.<br />

J. A. Lynch, Clerk, Agent, Grade Crossings<br />

Station, Chicago.<br />

H. L. Mast, Rate Clerk, Agent. Elkhart.<br />

W J May. Superintendent's office, Chicago.<br />

J. R. Melton, Claim Clerk, Agent, Mishawaka,<br />

Ind.<br />

N W Morrow. Chief Clerk. Agent, Elkhart.<br />

E. F. Nebling. Chief Clerk, Agent, LaPorte.<br />

Katherine Orey. c o Agent, Gibson.<br />

M. R. Roche, Chief Clerk, Agent, Chicago.<br />

M. P. Ryan, DFAB. Chicago.<br />

C. S. Sroda, Chief Clerk, Agent, Mishawaka,<br />

W. M. Stewart, DFCA, Chicago.<br />

R. C. Tobey, Clerk, DFAB, Englewood, 111.<br />

R. M. Warte, Train Dispatcher, Elkhart.<br />

O. W. Crapser, DPA, Chicago.<br />

ILLINOIS DIVISION<br />

R. B. Akers, Supervising Agent North Judson,<br />

Ind.<br />

John Dolezal, Clerk, North Judson, Ind.<br />

C. E. Harrison, Ticket Agent, Morocco, Ind.<br />

L. W. Kennedy, Agent, Dwight, 111.<br />

C. R. Knachel, Rate Clerk, North Judson, Ind.<br />

John Langan (2), Road Foreman of Engines,<br />

Kankakee, 111.<br />

C. R. Lee, Agent, Hamlet, Ind.<br />

T. O'Heron, Rate Clerk, Kankakee, 111.<br />

C. F. Swisher, DFA, Kankakee, 111.<br />

FRANKLIN DIVISION<br />

E. E. Pancost (2), Supervising Agent, Andover,<br />

Ohio.<br />

Frank Burns, Switchman, Youngstown.<br />

G. P. Lindsay, File Clerk, Superintendent's<br />

office, Youngstown.<br />

G. F. Wolcott, Agent, Jefferson, Ohio.<br />

C. C. Rogers, Chief Clerk, Ashtabula.<br />

G. E. Ramsdell (2), Agent, Ashtabula.<br />

Mary Smith, Clerk, Hubbard, Ohio.<br />

F. W. Bennett, Clerk, Sharon, Pa.<br />

G. R. McCormick (2), Rate Clerk, Franklin.<br />

A. C. Cowin (2), Agent, Franklin, Pa.<br />

R. R. Clark, Rate Clerk, DFA office, Youngstown.<br />

R. J. Sanford (2), Chief Clerk, Franklin.<br />

L. C. Stright, Stenographer, Franklin.<br />

F. M. Cannon, Operator, Franklin.<br />

Peter Wiseman, Operator, Clarks Mills, Pa.<br />

L. F. Lynn, Agent, Raymilton, Pa.<br />

H. C. Copeland, Receiving Clerk, Youngstown.<br />

J. A. Taylor, Rate Clerk, Youngstown.<br />

G. R. Bailey (2), Agent, Youngstown.<br />

C. Scullen, Carload Clerk, Youngstown.<br />

M. W. Ehler (2), Agent, Sutton, Pa.<br />

C. C. Thompson (2), Agent, Limestone, Pa.<br />

William Cooper (2), Agent, Reno. Pa.<br />

H. E. Kane, Chief Clerk. Oil City, Pa.<br />

V. N. Gregory, Agent, Hadley, Pa.<br />

Frank Baldwin (5), Agent, Oil City, Pa.<br />

W. A. Shaffer (2), District Claim Agent,<br />

Youngstown.<br />

C. A. A. Shakeley (2), Chief Train Dispatcher,<br />

Youngstown.<br />

E. C. Christy, Engineer, Youngstown.<br />

H. G. Johnston, Clerk, DFA office, Youngstown.<br />

A. S. Lape (2), Switchtender, Ashtabula.<br />

Charles Rice, Stationary Engineer. Ashtabula.<br />

H. P. Bunnell (2), Agent, Hubbard, Ohio.<br />

R. J. Cowin (2), Agent, Sharon, Pa.<br />

MICHIGAN CENTRAL<br />

A. L. Brinkman, Chief Clerk to Agent, Michigan<br />

City, Ind.<br />

INDIANA HARBOR BELT<br />

Eileen Coven, c/o AFA, Gibson, Ind.<br />

RUTLAND RAILROAD<br />

William E. Navin, Supervisor, Loss and Damage<br />

Prevention.<br />

Fred N. Wood, Chief Clerk, General Freight<br />

and Passenger Agent.<br />

Julia Costello, Stenographer-Clerk, General<br />

Freight and Passenger Agent.<br />

Harriet Jasmin, Stenographer, Assistant General<br />

Freight Agent.<br />

B. W. Flanders. Clerk. General Superintendent.<br />

G. W. Neil, Agent, Center Rutland.<br />

E. M. Barney, Agent, North Bennington.<br />

B. J. White. Agent, Stephentown.<br />

W. Daniel. Agent, Ogdensburg.<br />

R. W. McCracken, Agent, Winthrop.<br />

L. L. Moomey, Agent, North Lawrence.<br />

M. A. Baldwin, Agent, Brushton.<br />

W. C. Brady, Operator, Moira.<br />

W. T. Ashline, Terminal Agent, Alburgh.<br />

A. Aubertine, Agent, Mooers Forks.<br />

B. D. Corkins, Agent. Mooers.<br />

W. H. Smith, Agent, Rouses Point.<br />

E. A. Prichard, Conductor.<br />

PITTSBURGH & LAKE ERIE<br />

J. F. McDermott, Clerk, Pittsburgh.<br />

C. H. McConnell, Electrical Engineer, Pittsburgh.<br />

W. A. Stone, FA, New Castle, Pa.<br />

R. A. Gust, Cashier, Glassport, Pa.<br />

J. J. Costella, Telegrapher, Rankin, Pa.<br />

R. J. Runger, Pittsburgh.<br />

Dr. G. R. Winters, Chief Surgeon, Pittsburgh.<br />

F. W. Franz, Clerk, Pittsburgh.<br />

Reed Brown, Clerk. Pittsburgh.<br />

A. Joy, Pittsburgh.<br />

T. Scheffel. Pittsburgh.<br />

J. G. Roehm, Pittsburgh.<br />

Rosa Wittish. Clerk, Pittsburgh.<br />

E. M. Crawford, Draftsman, Pittsburgh.<br />

Hamp Stephens, Car Inspector, Shaw Junction,<br />

Pa. _<br />

W. J. Biggard, Electrical Foreman, McKees<br />

Rocks. Pa.<br />

F. C. Batteiger, Train Dispatcher, Lowellville,<br />

Ohio.<br />

A. H. Sykes. Safetv Agent. Pittsburgh.<br />

T. R. Thompson, McKees Rocks. Pa.<br />

77<br />

J. A. Ramn. Clerk, Master Car Builders' office,<br />

McKees Rocks, Pa.<br />

E. F. Keefe, Ticket Seller, Pittsburgh, Pa.


78 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

M<br />

"EN who have railroaded since<br />

the days of wooden coaches<br />

and wood-burning engines,<br />

together with the men and women<br />

who have joined the ranks in more recent<br />

years, attended the second annual<br />

banquet of the Niagara Frontier<br />

Chapter of the New York Central<br />

Veterans' Association in the Statler<br />

ballroom on the fourteenth of April.<br />

It was a most colorful gathering of<br />

men and women from all branches of<br />

railroad service, and their friends.<br />

The spacious ballroom was filled to<br />

capacity, with tables on the stage and<br />

in the balcony. Good-fellowship was<br />

the keynote of the gathering and vociferous<br />

applause greeted the pleas of<br />

railroad officials for continued co-operation<br />

and increased efficiency. Michael<br />

C. Slattery, President of the Association,<br />

presided and welcomed the<br />

assemblage, and Dr. J. W. LeSeur<br />

acted as toastmaster.<br />

/• John D. Wells, Managing Editor of<br />

the "BlirFaTo" Courter-Express, was the<br />

principal speaker of the evening, tracing<br />

in a serious-humorous talk the<br />

growth of the railroad industry from<br />

the pioneer days to the present day,<br />

when speed with safety is the slogan.<br />

"Railroads, curiously, span the life of<br />

practically every man," Mr. Wells<br />

said. "The two rigid bands of steel,<br />

beginning way back in those halcyon<br />

days, lead right down to here and now,<br />

and I dare say, have far greater influence<br />

upon the lives of men than<br />

most of those men realize. Could we<br />

turn back—take the back track for example—those<br />

two lines would carry<br />

us right back to the time and place<br />

from which we have strayed too far.<br />

Symbols of Advancement<br />

"The railroad has been the greatest<br />

factor in the upbuilding of the nation.<br />

The railroads are the great symbols<br />

of speed and world advancement."<br />

In his brief talk, Mr. Wells told of<br />

several personal experiences and of<br />

the careful manner in which railroad<br />

men safeguard passengers. He told<br />

of an experience in South Bend, Ind.,<br />

in which an old woman, upon arriving<br />

at her destination, personally<br />

thanked the engineman and gave him<br />

a piece of fruit cake for safely piloting<br />

the train through the night.<br />

The other speakers included T. Wt vans. Vice-President of the Indiana<br />

g<br />

Thousand at Second Annual Dinner of<br />

Buffalo Veterans<br />

arbor Belt Railroad, Chicago: Nor­<br />

man E. Mack, Democratic State Committeeman<br />

and publisher of the Buffalo<br />

Times; D. W. Dinan, ^General<br />

Manager, New York Central? Buffalo<br />

and East; David B. Fleming, Assistant<br />

General Mariager*,~Liri'e "fest,<br />

and Frank E. McCormack, General<br />

Superintendent.<br />

Mr. Evans spoke of the co-operation<br />

which always has characterized<br />

local employes of the New York Central<br />

and he pointed to it as one reason<br />

why the Niagara Frontier always<br />

has been so successful in railroad<br />

work. He referred to his career, start­<br />

1<br />

"<br />

ing with his first position in Buffalo,<br />

and gave some interesting facts concerning<br />

the gigantic railroad business<br />

of Chicago.<br />

Mr. Dinan also pleaded for continued<br />

co-operation as a means to increased<br />

efficiency. He wound up his<br />

remarks with a plea for every man<br />

and woman to get out and register in<br />

order to bring out a heavy vote for<br />

the presidential election.<br />

Besides the aforementioned, those<br />

guests at the speakers' table included<br />

W. A. Hamler, C. H. Hogan, W. G.<br />

Abriel, W. O. ThonrpTon, "1. A. Ward<br />

and E. ri. uroiy.<br />

Too" muchITfedlf "Cannot be given to<br />

Tom Ward, Assistant Freight Claim<br />

Agent, who was general chairman of<br />

the affair, assisted by R. C. Benson,<br />

T. H. Breene, F. J. Brennan, G. F.<br />

Burns, M. J. Crean, G. Eberhardt, C.<br />

H. Hogan, Grace Kolb, M. Kellener,<br />

C. S. McGinley, E. Newton, C. F.<br />

Urtt, J. C. Pierce, F. Schaefer, W. B.<br />

Shone, H. H. Varley, C. R. Wiseman<br />

and Rose Wode.<br />

Committees for the Dinner<br />

Others who served on the Reception<br />

Committee were: F. E. McCormack,<br />

chairman; Nellis Andrews, J. S. Blasie,<br />

P. Boyle, E. R. Boa, L. D. Burns,<br />

J. F. Carney, R. L. Chandler, L. W.<br />

Clegg, G. A. Dabell, M. Dwyer, N. J.<br />

Evans, George Evans, A. J. Fries, T.<br />

E. Fleming, W. A. Hamler, F. J.<br />

Hamscher, A. G. Hentz, R. C. Hicks,<br />

L. Howard, M. J. Kane, P. J. Keough,<br />

G. E. Kern, A. Lawson, Mae Lyons,<br />

W. H. Masterman, F. C. McGrath, E.<br />

Mossey, J. Muhlbauer, M. J. Murphy,<br />

W. H. Newman, W. J. O'Brien, 07X7<br />

orcher, j W. S. Randolph, WK^TT<br />

eeseman, F. S. Rice, J. H. Sneedy,<br />

J. A. Sands, d. Lf. »auer, T. J. Sexton,<br />

B. F. Shone. ,.T. Singer, ji. Taylor,<br />

J. G. Townsend, C. B. Unangst, J. H.<br />

Vosburgh and C.'H. WeBer.<br />

Dancing followed the dinner.<br />

Singing by the entire audience, led<br />

by the orchestra and a song leader,<br />

was a pleasant feature of the evening.<br />

Some of the songs sung to special<br />

words are given here:<br />

SIDE BY SIDE<br />

(To President P. E. Crowley)<br />

Oh, we don't get a barrel of money,<br />

Crowley may think that we're funny,<br />

But, we'll hustle along, singing a song,<br />

Side by side.<br />

We don't know what's coming tomorrow,<br />

Maybe it's trouble and sorrow<br />

But, we'll work for the road, sharing the load,<br />

Side by side.<br />

Through all kinds of weather,<br />

What if the skies should fall<br />

Just as long as we're together,<br />

It doesn't matter at all.<br />

When other roads feel kind of hard-up,<br />

We'll hit the ball about sun-up,<br />

Just you and me, and Boss P. E.,<br />

Side by side.<br />

HOWDY SONG<br />

Howdy do, Mr. McCormack, howdy do.<br />

Howdy do, Mr. Hamler, how are you,<br />

We are with you to a man; we'll do anything<br />

we can,<br />

Howdy do, Mr. Porcher, Howdy do.<br />

How do you do. How do you do.<br />

How do you doodle, doodle, doodle, doodle, do.<br />

If the N.Y.C. but knew, just how much we<br />

think of you—<br />

How do you doodle, doodle, doodle, doodle, do.<br />

HOGAN<br />

(Tune: "H-a-r-r-i-g-a-n")<br />

H-O-G-A-N, that's the way to spell Ho-gan,<br />

Proud of all the Irish blood that's in me,<br />

Divil a man can say a word agin me,<br />

H-O-G-A-N, that's the man you see,<br />

Is a name that a shame never has been connected<br />

with,<br />

Ho-gan, that's me.<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E CURSE OF AN ACHING HEART<br />

(To Mike Slattery and John Walber)<br />

You made us what we are today,<br />

We know you're satisfied.<br />

You got the gang together and<br />

Right now we're nearly tied,<br />

With divisions down the line,<br />

For sports, events and such,<br />

If it wasn't for Slattery and Walber,<br />

We sure would be out of luck.<br />

A PLEA TO DINAN FROM HIS HELP<br />

Dinan, Dinan, give us your answer, do,<br />

We're not whinin', it's all because of you,<br />

Tonight you look so cheerful,<br />

We'll just slip you an earful,<br />

We pray this day, you'll raise our pay,<br />

And we hope, by gosh, you do.<br />

"SHOW ME <strong>TH</strong>E WAY TO GO HOME"<br />

The New York Central Lines,<br />

The road without an end,<br />

Carries you where you want to go<br />

And brings you back again.<br />

Wherever you may roam,<br />

O'er land or sea or foam,<br />

The New York Central Railroad<br />

Will bring you swiftly home.<br />

AMONG MY SOUVENIRS<br />

(Dedicated to Charley Hogan's memorable race<br />

with time on the 999)<br />

There's nothing left for me, of a day that used<br />

to be.<br />

I live in memory within that good old cab.<br />

I opened throttle wide, sped through the countryside,<br />

.1 felt my joy and pride, I was a happy lad.<br />

I have a token left, within my humble breast,<br />

•And it sure does its best, to bring me consol-a-tion.<br />

I sit alone and sigh of good old days gone by.<br />

And up until I die, I'll have a souvenir.<br />

Capitol Vets Plan Picnic at<br />

Bear Mountain<br />

•jOEAR MOUNTAIN on the Hudson<br />

River will be the site of the picnic<br />

of Capitol Chapter, New York Central<br />

Veterans' Association, this summer, it<br />

was decided at a meeting in Odd Fellows<br />

Hall, Albany, April 16.<br />

Five hundred members attended the<br />

gathering, at which Mayor John B.<br />

Thatcher was a speaker. Addresses<br />

were also given by Assistant General<br />

Manager D. B. Fleming, General Superintendent<br />

F. S. Risley, General<br />

Foreman Benson and Dr. J. W.<br />

LeSeur.<br />

Serious Problem<br />

An engineer surveying the right of<br />

way for a proposed railroad in 1870<br />

was talking to a farmer.<br />

"Yes," he said, "the line will run<br />

right through your barnyard."<br />

"Well," answered the farmer, "ye<br />

can do it if ye want, but I'll be jiggered<br />

if I'll git up in the night just<br />

to open the gate every time a train<br />

comes through."—Capper's Weekly.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

ioto Chapter Presents Life Membership<br />

Cards to Retired Veterans<br />

BOUT 225 Veterans and their<br />

friends assembled for the meeting<br />

of Scioto Chapter of the Veterans'<br />

Association of the New York Central<br />

Railroad at the Elks Home, Columbus,<br />

Ohio, Tuesday evening, April 24.<br />

President W. A. Jex stated that the<br />

meeting was primarily called to present<br />

life membership cards to retired<br />

veterans of Scioto Chapter. In this<br />

connection he said that there were<br />

4,308 employes on the pension rolls of<br />

the New York Central Lines, of whom<br />

735 were pensioned during 1927, 98<br />

being employes of the Ohio Central<br />

Lines. Mr. Jex presented life membership<br />

cards to the following retired<br />

veterans:<br />

Charles S. Hawley, Paul Eberst, J.<br />

F. Newcomer, J. C. Blackwood, Lemon<br />

Meeker, Christ Dunlavy, J. C. Holmes,<br />

Joseph Staggs, A. H. Skidmore,<br />

George W. Funk, James Anderson,<br />

E. A. Smith, G. P. Eichhorn, Charles<br />

Becker, C. E. Dienst, Abraham Lucas.<br />

It was also announced that life<br />

membership cards would be mailed to<br />

the following members who were unable<br />

to be present at this meeting:<br />

J. D. Terrell, James A. Bope, Harry<br />

Hoselton, John O'Toole, Oren St.<br />

Clair, Charles N. Beelman, Enoch<br />

McDaniel, John Barrett, Harry Flegel,<br />

Wilhelm Goehringer, P. Christman,<br />

H. C. Billet, C. H. Baldwin, John Rayner,<br />

D. J. Sullivan, John Younker,<br />

William H. Murphy, Asa McAfee, J.<br />

H. Forrest, L. M. Gruver, James K.<br />

Clarke, W. B. Kent, William Ryan,<br />

Charles Roberts, A. E. Wheeler, J. F.<br />

Youse, J. L. Morgan, Jacob Edsinger,<br />

James G. Forbes, John Hammond,<br />

Philip S. Butts, F. A. Hamilton, Walter<br />

P. Vetter, H. C. Sargle, Charles<br />

Bentz, James Neely, William H. Miller,<br />

Warner N. Evans, William A.<br />

Giles, James Hartsell.<br />

Dr. J. W. LeSeur, Special Representative<br />

of President P. E. Crowley,<br />

vas presented an honorary life membership<br />

in the Scioto Chapter. Dr.<br />

LeSeur acknowledged receipt of these<br />

"ife memberships on behalf of the reired<br />

veterans and spoke highly of the<br />

-rvice which had been rendered by<br />

hese veterans.<br />

Announcement was made that the<br />

cioto Chapter picnic will be held at<br />

lentangy Park, Columbus, August 4.<br />

Committees are now being appointed<br />

to make arrangements for this annual<br />

affair.<br />

As a special feature of this meeting,<br />

motion pictures were shown of the<br />

Centralized Dispatching System put<br />

in operation on the Ohio Central Lines<br />

between Berwick, Ohio, and Stanley<br />

(Toledo), July 25, 1927. This system<br />

is the outgrowth of studies made by<br />

signal engineers of the Ohio Central<br />

Lines and the technical force of the<br />

General <strong>Railway</strong> Signal Company and<br />

is known as the Absolute Positive<br />

Block System. The dispatcher, located<br />

in an office thirty miles from one end<br />

and ten miles from the other end of<br />

this installation, operates each switch<br />

and signal and controls all trains on<br />

this forty-mile stretch. By this sys­<br />

tem trains are met and passed without<br />

stopping, since switches can be thrown<br />

by the dispatcher admitting a train to<br />

a siding.<br />

Signal Supervisor Oscar Falkenstein<br />

of Columbus, in a brief talk before<br />

the picture was shown, pointed<br />

out the fact that this was the first,<br />

and to date the only system of its kind<br />

in the world and that railroad men<br />

from many different countries have<br />

inspected its operation. Installations<br />

on other roads of various extent are<br />

now being undertaken by the General<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> Signal Company.<br />

Harry Haggard entertained with<br />

songs and Edward Seifert with a<br />

monologue.<br />

The meeting was closed by a buffet<br />

lunch and a general get-together.<br />

L. D. Gibson Retires<br />

D. GIBSON became a railroad<br />

L• man by a coincidence but liked the<br />

work so well that he continued with<br />

it until his retirement<br />

recently.<br />

The passenger<br />

agent at Grafton,<br />

Ohio, watched<br />

him as he worked<br />

in the stone quarries<br />

of Grafton<br />

and offered him a<br />

job as baggage<br />

master.<br />

From that day<br />

in 1880, Mr. Gibson<br />

stayed with<br />

the Big Four as<br />

L. D. Gibson baggage master,<br />

switchman and<br />

clerk. He is, of course, an ardent<br />

booster of the New York Central system<br />

on every occasion.<br />

O. Pioneers Dine at Watertown<br />

FROM early afternoon until late<br />

at night, the R. W. & 0. Pioneers'<br />

Chapter of the Veterans'<br />

Association made merry at the annual<br />

meeting in the Hotel Woodruff of<br />

Watertown, N. Y., April 25. Officers<br />

were chosen and plans for outings<br />

made at the business meeting at 3<br />

o'clock, and at 7:30 P.M. four hundred<br />

places were filled at the banquet.<br />

Afterward there was dancing.<br />

Harry S. Rauch again will be President<br />

of the chapter for the year 1928.<br />

Elected with him were J. H. O'Brien<br />

and C. D. Shaff, Vice-Presidents; J.<br />

H. Powers, Secretary-Treasurer; R.<br />

C. Ellsworth, Historian; Executive<br />

Committee—E. Dillingham, W. D.<br />

Carnes, W. J. Dempsey, F. W. Smith,<br />

W. V. Bidwell, and J. H. Rhubart;<br />

Nominating Committee—H. S. Ellsworth,<br />

F. L. Wilson, W. N. Hyatt, C.<br />

J. Finch, H. R. McGrath, H. O'Reilly<br />

and W. S. Austin.<br />

Efforts will be made by the Association<br />

to secure a large delegation to<br />

attend the joint outing of all chapters<br />

at Erie Beach, <strong>Canada</strong>, July 19, it was<br />

decided at the business meeting. A<br />

letter ballot will be taken of the membership<br />

to decide where and when the<br />

R. W. & O. Chapter will hold its own<br />

outing this summer.<br />

The report of the secretary showed<br />

a membership of 947, an increase of<br />

* * *<br />

DeWitt No.<br />

79<br />

more than 300 for the year. The activity<br />

of officers and co-operation of<br />

members was made responsible for the<br />

growth, which officers hope to augment<br />

further during the year.<br />

Dr. J. W. LeSeur, of Batavia, who<br />

acted as toastmaster, spoke briefly on<br />

the value of fellowship, which he<br />

praised as the keynote of the Veterans'<br />

Association.<br />

Brief remarks were made by D. B.<br />

Fleming, Assistant General Manager;<br />

Frank McCormack and F. S. Risley,<br />

General Superintendents; W. O.<br />

Thompson, Equipment Assistant; Superintendents<br />

C. F. Moyer and C. E.<br />

Olp; Charles H. Hogan, Engineman<br />

of the famous 999, and W. D. Carnes,<br />

retired Conductor.<br />

* * *<br />

LEADING INDIVIDUAL AVERAGES<br />

OF SYRACUSE BOWLERS<br />

g a a m<br />

5 « m .g «<br />

E « •<br />

SYRACUSE BOWLING LEAGUE<br />

e<br />

s<br />

Z<br />

*<br />

£ •£ Sf<br />

- m.s<br />

fH X" x"<br />

«<br />

-<br />

H<br />

a<br />

g<br />

<<br />

Larder 63 657 237 12,496 198<br />

Mullen 81 638 266 15,290 189<br />

Keller 84 652 268 15,918 189<br />

Maloney 77 648 258 14,319 187<br />

Hinds 75 629 256 13,981 186<br />

Deegan 69 650 230 12,610 183<br />

Cole 72 617 258 13,199 183<br />

Timm 6 573 205 1,083 181<br />

Brownell 84 692 246 15,212 181<br />

Faulds 15 569 212 2,663 178<br />

Tallman 69 621 223 12,274 178<br />

—FINAL STANDING OF TEAMS<br />

6 2 » n<br />

M ft M<br />

u C<br />

S o .VM .SP-S | g<br />

H En EC HI £ J A<br />

84 75,329 2,933 1,028 68 16 810<br />

84 72,985 2,892 1,046 54 30 643<br />

84 66,718 2,628 947 43 41 512<br />

84 67,740 2,730 990 40 44 476<br />

84 70,089 2,772 996 40 44 476<br />

84 70,120 2,850 1,037 40 44 476<br />

84 69,641 2,671 965 37 47 440<br />

84 63,956 2,522 895 14 70 167


80<br />

Metropolitan Chapter, New York City<br />

President, J. M. WOOLDRIDGE<br />

Secretary, G. E. V. OSBORNE, Room 534,<br />

4CG Lexington Avenue, New York City.<br />

Membership, 1,250.<br />

Capitol Chapter, Albany<br />

President, C. J. GOODWIN<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, E. F. MCMAHON<br />

Membership, 2,449.<br />

DeWitt Clinton Auxiliary<br />

Chief Director,<br />

MRS. GEORGE H. WOR<strong>TH</strong>INGTON<br />

Corresponding Secretary,<br />

MRS. OLIVER DANBERRY<br />

Niagara Frontier Chapter, Buffalo<br />

President, M. C. SLATTERY<br />

Secretary, R. C. BENSON, Room 2,<br />

Exchange Street Station, Buffalo.<br />

Membership, 1,243.<br />

N. Y. C.-Fall Brook Association,<br />

Corning, N. Y.<br />

President, C. N. BACON<br />

Secretary, L. J. CUSHING<br />

Membership, 60 Veterans.<br />

425 Juniors.<br />

Adirondack Chapter, Utica<br />

President, L. H. HASSELL<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, G. F. FUNK<br />

Membership, 400.<br />

Onondaga Chapter, Syracuse<br />

President, G. A. J. DOUGHERTY<br />

Se Tetary-Treasurer,<br />

W. V. MCCAR<strong>TH</strong>Y, New York Central<br />

Station, Syracuse, N. Y.<br />

Gasport, N. Y. Loses Watchman<br />

Patrick Gaughn<br />

T<strong>TH</strong>OUT having had an accident<br />

at his crossing during his<br />

thirty years of service there, Patrick<br />

H. Gaughn is now<br />

retired by the<br />

New York Central.<br />

crans ssociatnons<br />

Altogether, he<br />

gave forty - three<br />

years continuously<br />

to the Railroad,<br />

for he started, as<br />

a section laborer<br />

in 1885 and continued<br />

at this<br />

work until he was<br />

made watchman<br />

at the Main Street<br />

Patrick Gaughn £ r<br />

n g 0<br />

h e<br />

°?$ " *<br />

million - dollar<br />

highway" at" Gasport, N. Y.<br />

Mr. Gaughn was born in Ireland<br />

February 1, 1858, thus he reached the<br />

age limit for New York Central service<br />

at the end of February this year.<br />

His record of faithful work with the<br />

Company has been irreproachable, according<br />

to those who know him.<br />

Lake Shore Pioneer Chapter, Cleveland<br />

President, J. H. CALKINS<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, F. H. HANSON,<br />

872 East 149th St., Cleveland, Ohio.<br />

Membership, 4,495.<br />

Genesee Chapter, Rochester<br />

President, HARRY F. PIERCE<br />

Secretary, C. A. YACKEL, New York<br />

Central Ticket Office, Rochester, N. Y.<br />

Scioto Chapter, Columbus<br />

President, W. A. JEX<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, F. S. WILSON,<br />

Columbus.<br />

Membership, 451.<br />

Scioto Auxiliary<br />

Chief Director, MRS. W. A. JEX<br />

Corresponding Secretary,<br />

MRS. W. R. HOPKINS<br />

R. W. & O. Pioneer Chapter, Oswego<br />

President, HARRY S. RAUCH<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, J. H. POWERS,<br />

Oswego, N. Y.<br />

Membership, 950.<br />

Crowley Auxiliary<br />

President, MRS. C. F. MOYER<br />

Corresponding Secretary,<br />

MRS. O. V. SHEPARD, Oswego.<br />

Beech Creek Chapter, Clearfield, Pa.<br />

President, P. G. JOHNSON<br />

Secretary-Treasurer, R. L. CA<strong>TH</strong>CART,<br />

Clearfield.<br />

Membership, 442.<br />

Michigan Central Pioneer Association<br />

President, F. W. COWLEY<br />

Secretary, W. A. KEAVY,<br />

M.C.R.R. Station, Detroit, Mich.<br />

Membership, 3,842.<br />

A Clear Record in Safety for<br />

Charles Thorns as He<br />

Retires from M. C.<br />

HARLES <strong>TH</strong>OMS, Assistant<br />

C<br />

Wrecking Master, Michigan Cen­<br />

tral, Detroit, on the 29th of February<br />

took advantage of the Company's provision<br />

for pension at the age of sixtyfive,<br />

and retired after forty-seven<br />

years with the Road, thirty of which<br />

were spent in the wrecking service.<br />

Mr. Thorns entered as a car cleaner<br />

in 1881 with the old Toledo, <strong>Canada</strong><br />

<strong>Southern</strong> & Detroit, at a rate of<br />

twelve cents an hour. In 1883 he<br />

became a trucksmith, the job paying<br />

thirteen cents per hour. Advancing<br />

steadily he became car inspector, repair<br />

track foreman, and finally assistant<br />

wrecking master.<br />

The boys he was immediately associated<br />

with gave him a surprise sendoff<br />

at the Detroit East-bound Shop at<br />

the close of his last day in the service.<br />

D. P. Crillman, General Car Foreman,<br />

and his assistant, Fred Kerr, presided<br />

over the hundred boys present. Mr.<br />

Thorns was complimented on his long<br />

and efficient service, particularly the<br />

fact that, although thirty years of it<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

had been in a hazardous branch of the<br />

work, he had an absolutely clear Safety<br />

record, never having been injured<br />

or caused injury to another—a mark<br />

for present-day young railroaders to<br />

shoot at.<br />

To commemorate the occasion, the<br />

boys presented Mr. Thorns with a<br />

handsome easy chair and smoking<br />

stand. He responded by saying:<br />

"When I first started with the<br />

wrecker it was all hard work, as we<br />

had only a hand derrick, the X-918.<br />

However, I liked the work and stayed<br />

right on the job. Today, the wrecking<br />

equipment is of the best. I have<br />

always worked with the thought of<br />

Safety, and was never injured, neither<br />

do I know of any of my fellow workmen<br />

being seriously injured during<br />

all the years I was on the wrecking<br />

outfit. We had many wrecks some<br />

years ago, but since the "Safety First"<br />

campaign started, together with the<br />

many improvements installed, wrecks<br />

have almost become a thing of tha<br />

past.<br />

"During my service with the Company,<br />

I have always been accorded<br />

the best of treatment by my superiors,<br />

and if there is anything I can do for<br />

the good of the service in the future,<br />

I will be more than pleased to do so."<br />

Flagman Writes Appreciation<br />

for Pension<br />

OHN F. BANKS, retired Flagman<br />

J of Bucyrus, Ohio, writes of his appreciation<br />

for the amount of his pension<br />

allowance. Mr. Banks, though<br />

retired from active service, is a consistent<br />

booster of the Railroad he<br />

served forty-one years. His letter to<br />

J. J. Brinkworth, Superintendent of<br />

the Ohio Division, reads as follows:<br />

"I am over-pleased with and surprised<br />

at the amount of my pension<br />

and am not able to express to you and<br />

the Pension Board my many heartfelt<br />

thanks.<br />

"I received a check in February<br />

for $290.85, back allowance, and one<br />

for $41.55, and I shall ever speak<br />

praises for all officials of whatever<br />

capacity for the interest they have<br />

taken in my behalf.<br />

"I want to speak also of P. B.<br />

Holmes, Agent, and J. D. Harrod,<br />

Train Master, of Bucyrus for the<br />

many kind favors I received from<br />

them. It makes me feel glad to think<br />

that in my humble walk of life, I was<br />

cherished in the minds of those of my<br />

superiors in rank. And now may all<br />

the hardships and joys be good and<br />

the hard times be of the past. I shall<br />

try to remember the kindness received<br />

in times gone by and speak for the<br />

interest and general welfare of the<br />

New York Central Railroad Company.<br />

"In conclusion, please accept my<br />

many humble and sincere thanks to<br />

all concerned for the kind consideration<br />

given me, and with our best<br />

wishes to all for future success, we<br />

are ever your friend in truth and love<br />

and in all you have been to us."<br />

Starting as a yard brakeman at<br />

Corning in 1887, Mr. Banks was made<br />

a towerman at Centerburg, Ohio, in<br />

1899, and a watchman at Bucyrus in<br />

1903 and until his retirement, June<br />

1, 1927. His home is at V? Whetstone<br />

Street, Bucyrus.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 81<br />

Square Clubs Officers<br />

JJOR those who are interested in the<br />

JL organization of the New York<br />

Central Lines Square Clubs, Inc., the<br />

list printed below gives the name, in<br />

order, of the president, first vice-president<br />

and secretary, with the secretary's<br />

address:<br />

Grand Club—S. H. Scharschmidt, C.<br />

F. Teepell and F. E. Wass, 382 East<br />

199th Street, New York City.<br />

Albany Club, No. 583—J. M. Haynes,<br />

B. J. Smith and P. F. Doeringer, 569<br />

Second Street, Albany, N. Y.<br />

Ashtabula Club, No. 719—H. N. Holbrook,<br />

W. L. Rickard and R. Weaver,<br />

Lake and Deport Streets, Ashtabula,<br />

Ohio.<br />

Buffalo Club, No. 782—Arthur P.<br />

Miller, Frank J. Freeman, and Earl<br />

D. Nye, 594 Kensington Avenue, Buffalo,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Chicago Club, No. 611—W. 0. Ferguson,<br />

T. J. Schram and W. H. Lathrop,<br />

7325 Vincennes Avenue, Chicago,<br />

111.<br />

Cleveland Club, No. 586— E. M. Pugh,<br />

F. A. Ryan and H. W. Evans, 1713<br />

Fernway Road, Shaker Heights, Ohio.<br />

Detroit Club, No. 613—J. W. Piper,<br />

C. A. Riebling and F. H. Dilla, 3299<br />

Whitney Avenue, Detroit, Mich.<br />

Elkhart Club, No. 765—F. H. Long,<br />

C. M. Dunivan and A. R. Minnes, 1827<br />

Benham Avenue, Elkhart, Ind.<br />

Jackson Club, No. 680—B. A. Horning,<br />

B. S. Helmer and H. F. Southerland,<br />

407 West Michigan Avenue,<br />

Jackson, Mich.<br />

New York Club, No. 281—J. T. Fatzinger,<br />

J. Masset and W. S. Adams,<br />

270 Marbledale Road, Tuckahoe, N. Y.<br />

Rochester Club, No. 584—F. C. Vroman,<br />

A. C. Moak and W. Puleston,<br />

144 Melville Street, Rochester, N. Y.<br />

Syracuse Club, No. 585—C. W. Wheeler,<br />

E. E. Hart and L. Faulds, 321<br />

Garfield Avenue, Syracuse, N. Y.<br />

Toledo Club, No. 587-L. L. Lightfoot,<br />

C. W. Greene and F. C. Steinmueller,<br />

747 Boalt Street, Toledo,<br />

Ohio.<br />

Utica Club, No. 652—C. P. Palmer,<br />

J. H. Harper and C. F. Teepell, 61<br />

Highby Road, Utica, N. Y.<br />

Youngstown Club—F. H. Macllvane,<br />

H. F. Simons and R. E. Bender, 464<br />

Sherwood Avenue, Youngstown, Ohio.<br />

Yard Masters Meet at Banquet<br />

^'IFTY yard masters from points on<br />

the New York Central between<br />

uffalo and Utica and northward to<br />

Watertown and Oswego, held their<br />

third annual banquet in Syracuse<br />

March 27. E. J. Loughrey, Grand<br />

President of Lodge 42, Yard Masters'<br />

Association of North America, presided.<br />

C. G. Lynch, Grand Secretary<br />

and Treasurer, was also present.<br />

Guests included M. E. Welch, Superintendent,<br />

Syracuse Division; C.<br />

A. Raymonda, Assistant Superintendent<br />

; Thomas Leonard, General Yard<br />

Master at Dewitt; Dan Harris, General<br />

Yard Master at Rochester; A. B.<br />

James B. Pollock, Traveling Auditor, was greeted with the above testimonial<br />

when he was retired at Buffalo in March.<br />

Lincoln, General Yard Master at Belle<br />

Isle; John T. Howley, General Yard<br />

Master at Syracuse; M. A. Rogers,<br />

Terminal Train Master at Dewitt;<br />

Philip C. Agans, Train Master, Mohawk<br />

Division, and A. J. Zwilling,<br />

Train Master, Syracuse Division.<br />

"Grand Slam" Girls in Chicago<br />

Give Bridge Party<br />

HE Grand Slam Limited (Girls'<br />

TBridge Club) which was organized<br />

October 14, 1927, held its first public<br />

card party on March 2 in the New<br />

York Central Athletic Association club<br />

rooms, LaSalle Street Station, Chicago.<br />

More than one hundred persons<br />

were present and there were tables of<br />

bridge, five hundred and bunco. There<br />

were prizes for high score at each<br />

table.<br />

A goodly sum was realized and will<br />

be devoted to buying drapes for windows<br />

of the club rooms.<br />

The committee handling the party<br />

consisted of Mrs. Allene Grant, chairman;<br />

Misses Evangeline Carlson, May<br />

Doolan, Irene Shantz, and Elsa Otto.<br />

Selkirk Hostler Retired<br />

A NO<strong>TH</strong>ER faithful employe, William<br />

A. Dabrunz, is enjoying the<br />

fruits of long service with the New<br />

York Central.<br />

Mr. Dabrunz<br />

recently retired<br />

as Hostler in the<br />

Selkirk Engine<br />

House, Mohawk<br />

Division.<br />

Starting as a<br />

coaler at Ravena,<br />

N. Y., in 1883, he<br />

was made a fire<br />

cleaner at the<br />

same place in<br />

1888 and a hostler<br />

in 1895. In 1924,<br />

he was trans­<br />

W. A. Dabrunz<br />

ferred to Selkirk<br />

where he remained until his retirement.<br />

Mr. Dabrunz's fellow workers and<br />

employers have praised his conscientiousness<br />

and zeal in the performance<br />

of duty and extended their best wishes<br />

for long years of leisure.<br />

Mr. Dabrunz makes his home at<br />

Coeyman's, N. Y.


82<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

William H. Smith drove a flag-adorned locomotive for his farewell run as Engineman on the Ohio Central Lines. He is shown<br />

here with his crew and with the flowers that were presented to him. The men are, left to right: Brakemen O. E. Heinz<br />

and Ed Benton, Conductor Adam Conkle, Engineman Swith, and Fireman C. Love.<br />

Patrick Kane, William Smith,<br />

Retire Together at Corning<br />

FTER forty-seven years of con­<br />

A tinuous service, Patrick W. Kane,<br />

Passenger Conductor on the Ohio Central<br />

Lines, Bucyrus, and William H.<br />

Smith, Engineman, Bucyrus, with<br />

forty-five years of continuous service,<br />

were retired on pension March 31, both<br />

having reached the tge of seventy.<br />

These veterans were honored with a<br />

dinner at the Bucyrus High School on<br />

the night of March 30, attended by a<br />

large gathering of railroad officers<br />

and employes.<br />

After an enjoyable repast, served<br />

with military precision by the Ladies'<br />

Auxiliary of the Brotherhood of Railroad<br />

Trainmen, a number of officers<br />

and fellow workmen spoke of the commendable<br />

records of the honored<br />

guests and of the years of pleasant<br />

association with them. Conductor L.<br />

A. Miller officiated as toastmaster.<br />

Among the principal speakers were Conductor Kane with Mrs. Kane in the<br />

Superintendent J. J. Brinkworth, Di­ rear of the bunting-bedecked train<br />

vision Master Mechanics O. P. Skeen which he handled the day of his re­<br />

and W. A. Jex, Superintendent W. W.<br />

tirement at Bucyrus.<br />

Houston of the Hocking Valley Railroad,<br />

Mayor Arthur Schuler, and Earl James Keenan Remembers<br />

Cook, President of the Bucyrus Board<br />

of Education.<br />

Early Adirondack Days<br />

Music was furnished by the New RAINS used to kill deer occa­<br />

York Central Athletic Association Tsionally in the days when James<br />

Band and several vocal selections F. Keenan of Albany started railroad­<br />

were given by the Bucyrus New York ing on the Mohawk & Malone line.<br />

Central Quartet. "Pat" and "Bill" Since then times have changed con­<br />

were presented with appropriate gifts siderably, he mused the other day on<br />

by their associates, also President Jex the eve of his retirement as a bag­<br />

of the Scioto Chapter presented them<br />

gage man on the New York Central.<br />

with life memberships in the Veterans'<br />

Association.<br />

When the Adirondacks were still<br />

Mr. Kane will make his future a wilderness, forest fires were plenti­<br />

home at Beulah, Mich., while Mr. ful and a constant hazard for railroad<br />

Smith will continue to make Bucyrus men. Winter brought other problems,<br />

his home.<br />

Mr. Keenan remembers. Once, when<br />

he was a train baggage man, his train<br />

was stopped by a blizzard. When the<br />

steam gave out, the crew shoveled<br />

snow into the tank of the locomotive.<br />

In 1892 Mr. Keenan became a mail<br />

handler at Albany for the New York<br />

Central. In his retirement he will<br />

live at 49 North Lansing Street, Albany.<br />

<strong>Southern</strong> Division Men Show<br />

Spirit of Co-operation<br />

N example of New York Central<br />

co-operation is related in a letter<br />

telling of a landslide at Hatfield Cut,<br />

in West Virginia.<br />

John Chuvales, Section Foreman,<br />

writes that four hundred tons of rock<br />

were loosened and that a hundred tons<br />

covered the tracks near the Hatfield<br />

Tunnel April 7.<br />

Engineman P. C. McCoy, arriving at<br />

the place about 12:10 A.M., was immediately<br />

alert to the danger and<br />

stopped his train in time. When the<br />

section laborers arrived to clear the<br />

tracks they were given able assistance<br />

from the train crew, headed by the<br />

conductor and Fireman Bennett.<br />

Mr. Chuvales comments: "I hear<br />

that Henry Ford has given instructions<br />

for his crews to assist in work<br />

whenever the occasion demands; our<br />

men do not have to have instructions,<br />

and Henry's men will have to step up<br />

to beat the New York Central men<br />

cn the <strong>Southern</strong> Division."<br />

Sergeant Joseph C. Dunn has been<br />

appointed to the vacancy caused by<br />

the death of Lieutenant F. J. Bigley<br />

of the New York Central police. Sergeant<br />

Dunn has been on duty on the<br />

Mohawk Division since 1919.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 83<br />

Sprightly Tales from Cab and Caboose<br />

A Series of Merry Minglings of Fact and Fable, Chiefly Along<br />

/^"J|" NEVER see a circus train but<br />

I get a hankering for the old<br />

days back in the nineties when<br />

Dan Collins and I were following the<br />

sawdust circle together through the<br />

West," said Slim Wiltsie, Boston &<br />

Albany engineer, as he sat in the cab<br />

of the 1213 at Chatham one June<br />

morning awaiting a chance to get<br />

through the yards on a return trip<br />

to Hudson.<br />

"It's like railroading, once it gets<br />

in your blood it sticks. By the looks<br />

of that flat that just went by loaded<br />

with stakes and tent poles it hasn't<br />

changed much. If I had a dollar for<br />

every stake I drove for the Bustem<br />

& Baleful circus I wouldn't have to<br />

railroad another hour. Those were<br />

the days!"<br />

"When did you ever travel with a<br />

circus?" asked Ed Carey, brakeman,<br />

a bit scornfully as if doubting Slim's<br />

word. "I'll bet you've never been<br />

nearer a circus than I have and that<br />

means you paid your half dollar and<br />

took a seat on a hard blue plank,<br />

along with several hundred other<br />

rubes."<br />

"Is that so?" answered Slim. "Well,<br />

for your information I'll tell you that<br />

I spent a couple of the happiest years<br />

of my life traveling with the Bustem<br />

& Baleful circus. I've been in nearly<br />

every town of any size in every western<br />

state, but you fellows don't have<br />

to believe it if you don't want to. I've<br />

got my memories."<br />

"Tell us about it, Slim," said Ed.<br />

"How did you come to give up circus<br />

life for railroading? There's two sections<br />

of the circus to go through and<br />

by then it will be time for No. 3. Be<br />

an hour yet before they give you the<br />

iron. Go ahead, spin the yarn."<br />

"I was in St. Louis at the time,"<br />

said Slim, easing himself down on a<br />

seat cushion and elevating his feet up<br />

on the reverse lever. "I was broke<br />

and so was Dan Collins, a lad of<br />

about my own age whom I met in the<br />

railroad yards. We were both looking<br />

for some way to get out of town.<br />

Bustem & Baleful's circus was leaving<br />

town that night and we left with it,<br />

bedded down on a section of the big<br />

top, on a flat car. The next day we<br />

hired out to the boss canvasman. Our<br />

the Harlem Division but Just as Interesting to the Folks<br />

all Along the Main Line<br />

1\p. 4 2 — T h e ^ Fakers<br />

By GEORGE H. W O O D I N G , Towerman, Ghent, N . Y.<br />

(All rights reserved)<br />

job was to kiss stake heads with an<br />

iron sledge. We were good at it, too,<br />

but Dan was ambitious and I followed<br />

him like a faithful collie. In the two<br />

years we followed that circus we had<br />

nearly every job on the lot and we saw<br />

quite a bit of the country. When we<br />

finally quit, Dan was in charge of the<br />

magic medicine tent, where they cured<br />

everything from a corn to a case of<br />

acute heart disease for a dollar, if<br />

you had it, or for a quarter just before<br />

we loaded the last train at night.<br />

I was Dan's assistant and we made<br />

the medicine during the forenoon<br />

hours near a handy brook or well.<br />

A little oil of cloves, alum, liniment<br />

and some sweet smelling essence. It<br />

cost about a nickel and sold for a<br />

dollar a bottle and it was wonderful<br />

the way Dan could dispose of it, especially<br />

to the women. They would<br />

be first to hand him their dollars after<br />

he gave one of his spiels or perhaps<br />

rubbed a few drops of the Wonder<br />

Cure on a baby's head to remove a<br />

rash.<br />

"We quit the circus at Jefferson<br />

City, Mo., one spring morning. Dan<br />

got the idea that we should strike out<br />

for ourselves and make some real<br />

money. 'This tent of mine cleared<br />

four hundred dollars last week,' said<br />

Dan, 'and here we are working for<br />

about thirty a month, coffee and cakes.<br />

As long as I can find a drug store and<br />

brook I can make this medicine and<br />

sell it. We'll strike out through Oklahoma<br />

and into New Mexico and maybe<br />

next season the Atlantic seaboard.<br />

Slim, we go fifty-fifty and your job<br />

is to be the sick man. Let's get out<br />

of town a bit and make a batch of<br />

medicine, then I'll drill you in the part<br />

you are to play.'<br />

"Dan's idea was original and no<br />

doubt would have been worth a couple<br />

of hundred dollars weekly to the circus<br />

if we had stuck with them. At<br />

each town we visited, my role was to<br />

precede Dan by a day or two as a sick<br />

and ragged hobo, eliciting food, sympathy<br />

and often medical attention. In<br />

the evening when Dan's torchlight<br />

and ballyhoo had attracted a crowd<br />

I would be among them and when the<br />

sales began to slacken 1 would do the<br />

faint act and the Wonder Medicine<br />

would do the rest. I'll give you an<br />

illustration.<br />

"It's an evening in, say, Alamosa,<br />

Colorado. At a prominent street corner<br />

Dan has a crowd of a couple of<br />

hundred and is giving his usual spiel.<br />

" 'Ladies and Gentlemen: Opportunity<br />

knocks once at every door. She<br />

is knocking at yours tonight. There<br />

are none blinder than those who will<br />

not see, none deafer than those who<br />

will not hear. If you still have doubts<br />

of the efficacy of the Wonder Medicine<br />

which I have just described to<br />

you, listen to these testimonials. Here<br />

is a letter from a mother of ten children<br />

who lives in Osculpupia, Arizona.<br />

She writes:<br />

" 4<br />

"Dear Wonder Medicine Man:<br />

Enclosed find two dollars. Send me<br />

by return mail two bottles of the Wonder<br />

Medicine. Eight of my children<br />

were badly stung by bees and they<br />

have a rash which resembles the hives.<br />

Their father gave them a good licking<br />

for knocking over the bee-hive and<br />

some of their rashness has disappeared.<br />

Still I do not feel safe without<br />

your medicine in the house at all<br />

times." Signed, Mrs. Lucy Littlewill.<br />

" 'Here is another from a poor,<br />

hard-working woman in Joseyville,<br />

Alabama:<br />

" ' "Send at once three bottles of<br />

Wonder Medicine. Pete has used up<br />

our bottle for his rheumatism and<br />

now is so well he can sit in the sun<br />

all day and I have been able to take<br />

in four more washings. Mrs. Alice<br />

Weakweather."<br />

" 'Friends, are there any among you<br />

troubled with ardemiasia, arteriagria,<br />

arthrocile, acholia, achroma, cerebroma,<br />

cebrosio, dermalgia, dermatrophia,<br />

dermatosis, dumdum fever, gasterasthenia,<br />

gastralgia, Gaucher's disease,<br />

German measles, earache, toothache,<br />

backache, corns, bunions, spine<br />

or hip ailments, liver or kidney complaints,<br />

biliousness, loss of appetite,<br />

dandruff and falling hair or any of<br />

the numerous ills or ailments that the<br />

human flesh is heir to? I say to you<br />

one and all, step right up, deposit<br />

your dollar and go home happy; happy<br />

in the knowledge that your troubles<br />

will vanish with the rising of tomorrow's<br />

sun, for the Wonder Medicine<br />

never fails to do all and more than we<br />

claim for it.'<br />

"About then if the sales were slackening,<br />

he would give me a signal, and


84 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

I would topple over in the crowd, apparently<br />

very sick. I would be given<br />

plenty of attention and there usually<br />

were two or three women present<br />

whose homes I had visited that day.<br />

'Poor man,' they would say, 'he was<br />

at my door this morning and I gave<br />

him something to eat. He needs a<br />

doctor! Then Dan would come pushing<br />

through the crowd and after giving<br />

me an examination would exclaim,<br />

'Ah, a very advanced stage of gastralgia.<br />

Here, my man, take a few<br />

drops of this. Good. I can feel the<br />

pulse responding. Sit over here and<br />

in a few hours you will feel like<br />

a new man. You have no money<br />

to pay me? My friend, I am not asking<br />

any pay. All I ask you to do is<br />

to tell these good folks how much different<br />

you feel. No, you keep the<br />

bottle and within a week or two you<br />

will be entirely cured. Too bad you<br />

could not have gotten some of the<br />

Wonder Medicine sooner.'<br />

"Sales would be brisk after this.<br />

Later we would meet at some appointed<br />

place and plan for our next stop.<br />

"It was in the little town of Wishwell,<br />

in Oklahoma, that we ran into<br />

our first trouble. The name of that<br />

town was sure a misnomer for us. We<br />

had pulled our act and had taken in<br />

perhaps thirty dollars when suddenly<br />

a woman in the crowd let out a yell,<br />

'They're burglars, John, you ought to<br />

arrest them. I wouldn't give their<br />

medicine to a mangy cat. They were<br />

in our town a week ago and I paid<br />

them a dollar for a bottle of that perfumed<br />

benzine. The next morning my<br />

husband met them as they were leaving<br />

town and they sold him four bottles<br />

for fifty cents, and that was more<br />

than it was worth. They told him a<br />

teaspoonful in hot water would remove<br />

his corns. He soaked his feet<br />

for two hours that night in the mixture<br />

and they became petrified. He<br />

can't get his shoes on. You arrest<br />

them, John, and; I'll appear against<br />

them.'<br />

"It seemed she was a visitor from<br />

out-of-town and John, her cousin, was<br />

the local chief of police who was perfectly<br />

willing to give his out-of-town<br />

relative a demonstration of his powers,<br />

so despite our protests, within a<br />

few moments Dan and I were securely<br />

handcuffed together and on our way<br />

to the village calaboose, where we<br />

slept fitfully on a couple of hard<br />

benches until the following morning<br />

when we were hailed before the town's<br />

one justice, who, being newly elected<br />

and full of the dignity which his constituents<br />

had so lately conferred upon<br />

him, never gave us a chance, but immediately<br />

sentenced us to return to<br />

the place from whence we came,<br />

namely, the lockup, and there to lie in<br />

durance vile for a period of thirty<br />

days, or at least so he said—but he<br />

didn't know Dan Collins and Slim<br />

Wiltsie.<br />

"We stayed peacefully in the lockup<br />

for a couple of days, in order, as<br />

Dan said, 'to let the townspeople become<br />

fully satiated with the facts of<br />

our incarceration.' That boy Dan<br />

could sure figure. The entire population<br />

of the village would walk around<br />

the lockup at least twice daily and<br />

peer in at us through the unprotected<br />

frame window as though we were a<br />

couple of captured bob-cats. The<br />

third night at about twelve, we pushed<br />

out the window and were free. I followed<br />

Dan to the yards of the local<br />

junk dealer, where we picked up a bag<br />

of selected bones, including a couple<br />

of badly battered skulls which probably<br />

had once been worn by some<br />

farmer's calves. These we carried back<br />

to our former jail, threw them inside,<br />

touched a match to the crazy shebang,<br />

and by the time the flames were lighting<br />

up the countryside and the village<br />

bucket brigade had hunted up<br />

their water pails we were three miles<br />

from there.<br />

"They say scandal and bad news<br />

will travel five miles while good news<br />

is getting its breeches on. It sure did<br />

in this case. At nearly every town<br />

we visited we heard people talking of<br />

how two doctors who had been wrongly<br />

arrested and jailed at Wishwell<br />

had been burned alive without a<br />

chance. It seems there were opposing<br />

political factions there willing and<br />

anxious to get at each other's throats.<br />

This did not make us mad. One paper<br />

stated in tearful terms, 'From the position<br />

of the bones which our reporter<br />

viewed, indications are that these two<br />

brave men died in each other's arms.'<br />

Other papers were trying to trace our<br />

relatives. There were hints of lawsuits<br />

and suggestions that the authorities<br />

might better pay reasonable indemnities.<br />

Then I saw through Dan's<br />

strategy in depositing the bones in<br />

the lockup.<br />

"We journeyed by easy stages to<br />

Galveston, Texas. Here Dan had some<br />

letterheads and envelopes printed. We<br />

rented a typewriter which we took to<br />

our room at the hotel, then we spent<br />

several days in the public library,<br />

poring into law books. Soon Dan had<br />

our first letter typed and addressed to<br />

the authorities of Wishwell, Oklahoma,<br />

as from the law firm of Gettem<br />

& Holdem, making inquiry as to the<br />

whereabouts of one Doctor Collins, a<br />

prominent physician and manufacturer<br />

of medicine, who had last been<br />

heard of traveling through their county<br />

with his valet, and whose wife was<br />

near collapse because of her inability<br />

to locate her husband.<br />

" 'A guilty conscience needs no accuser.'<br />

We were not long in getting<br />

a reply, in fact several of them. The<br />

Wishwell authorities admitted their<br />

liability and seemed anxious to settle<br />

without due process of law. Dan led<br />

off with a suggestion of fifty thousand<br />

dollars, 'Which we may be able to induce<br />

Mrs. Collins to accept, as soon<br />

as she recovers from the great shock<br />

she has sustained. As soon as she can<br />

travel and her normal faculties return<br />

to her,' Dan wrote, 'a member of<br />

our firm will accompany her to Wishwell,<br />

where perhaps, the matter may<br />

be concluded. At present she is a<br />

very sick woman and wholly unable<br />

to discuss business in any way.'<br />

"The Wishwell people countered<br />

with an offer of two thousand cash<br />

and the town's bond for eight thousand<br />

! The very best they could do.'<br />

"Finally Dan accepted and a date<br />

was set for one of the firm of Gettem<br />

& Holdem to accompany the Widow<br />

Collins to Wishwell.<br />

" 'Who's to go?' I asked Dan.<br />

" 'I am,' he answered. 'What do<br />

you suppose I have been letting my<br />

wihskers grow for?'<br />

" 'And who is to be the widow?' I<br />

asked.<br />

" 'Why, you are,' said Dan. 'I've<br />

bought your mourning dress and veiling.<br />

Your falsetto voice just fits in.<br />

You will need a close shave.'<br />

"For nearly two weeks, under Dan's<br />

direction I rehearsed my part in our<br />

room at the hotel. I got so that I<br />

could sob and cry and throw hysterics<br />

as easily as any woman that ever<br />

lived. My first trip out on the streets<br />

though in my newly assumed role<br />

was nearly the cause of my undoing.<br />

I was standing near the entrance to a<br />

big department store watching the<br />

crowds and hankering for a smoke<br />

when a woman carrying a little 1<br />

baby<br />

asked me if I would hold the child<br />

while she went inside to do some trading.<br />

I of course complied, and that<br />

kid did nothing but squawk the whole<br />

half hour that she was gone. There<br />

was quite a crowd around when she<br />

returned, and then instead of thank-<br />

,ing me, she lit into me in scandalous<br />

fashion.<br />

" 'You a widow and probably a<br />

mother,' she said, 'holding a sixmonths-old<br />

baby upside down. You<br />

should be ashamed of yourself!' I<br />

knew then why the kid had carried<br />

on so.<br />

" 'I was thinking of my husband,<br />

ma'am,' I replied, sobbing in my best<br />

trained manner. 'If he had lived I<br />

could have had a child of my own.<br />

Forgive me.'<br />

"She was all interest and sympathy<br />

then and wanted me to go with her to<br />

her home but I was glad to get back<br />

to the hotel and my pipe.<br />

"Came the day when we journeyed<br />

to Wishwell. Dan had arranged our<br />

schedule so that we arrived there at<br />

late evening. He had all he could do<br />

to keep me out of the smoking car on<br />

our journey, a matter that would not<br />

attract much attention now though.<br />

On our arrival we went at once to the<br />

town's one hotel, where we engaged<br />

rooms, and from there Dan telephoned<br />

the town authorities of our arrival<br />

and made arrangements for our meeting<br />

on the following morning with<br />

Squire Peasley, the town pettifogger<br />

who, by the way, was the same justice<br />

of the peace who had meted out to us<br />

our thirty-day sentence. 'Mrs. Collins<br />

has not stood the journey very<br />

well,' Dan phoned. 'She is nervous<br />

and upset. The negotiations must be<br />

brief and quiet. She must not be subjected<br />

to the ordeal of facing a curious<br />

crowd. She must be gotten back<br />

to the care of her own physician as<br />

soon as possible, so I ask that you<br />

send but one representative. We have<br />

made reservations to leave on the 9<br />

A.M. train.'<br />

" 'Sprinkle plenty of the contents of<br />

this bottle of eau de lilacs perfume<br />

around you and don't forget to shave,'<br />

said Dan the following morning. I<br />

am going down to the office to type a<br />

sort of contract. Squire Peasley will<br />

be here about 8:30. Don't come into<br />

the room where we are until I call<br />

you, and then come sobbing and acting<br />

as though you were going to faint,<br />

and remember when you sign to sign<br />

Minnie V. Collins not Mrs. Dan.'<br />

"I had on about half of my femi-<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 85<br />

nine attire some time later when I<br />

suddenly remembered that I was to<br />

shave, so in my petticoat and corset<br />

1 was busy lathering up and taking<br />

an occasional puff on my pipe when I<br />

heard someone in Dan's room adjoining.<br />

I supposed it was Dan until as<br />

1 stood before the mirror with poised<br />

razor, I caught sight of the leering<br />

face of Squire Peasley, who, standing<br />

on a chair in Dan's room, had projected<br />

his head through the transom<br />

over the door which led from my room<br />

to Dan's. I realized from the look of<br />

cunning and exultation on his features<br />

that he knew that he had made<br />

a discovery of vast importance to himself<br />

and his town. I thought quickly<br />

in those few seconds. I knew that he<br />

must not know that I had seen him.<br />

I took another puff on my pipe and<br />

then walked over toward the door as<br />

though to sharpen my razor on the<br />

strop which swung from the doorknob.<br />

Suddenly I reached up and released<br />

the rod which controlled the<br />

door transom, and the squire was<br />

fast. He had only yelled one yell<br />

before I had a towel in his mouth,<br />

then Dan arrived and quickly took in<br />

the situation and together we trussed<br />

the squire up and left him comfortably<br />

on the floor of the bathroom,<br />

where we knew someone would stumble<br />

upon him within an hour.<br />

"Among the squire's effects we<br />

found the town's bond and two thousand<br />

dollars in cash. We took the<br />

cash but left the bond. Dan said the<br />

cash was a just compensation for our<br />

false imprisonment and consequent<br />

humiliation and I agreed, as I always<br />

did, to what Dan said. We got out of<br />

Wishwell on the 9 o'clock train as per<br />

schedule, and once on the train I was<br />

not long in shaking my widow's weeds<br />

and getting out my pipe. Dan gave<br />

me my thousand dollars, and at Austin,<br />

Texas, we separated as I wanted<br />

to come East and visit my folks.<br />

"Dan headed for Los Angeles. I<br />

suppose he is still selling medicine<br />

somewhere. I got in the railroad<br />

game and here I am. I never pick up<br />

a razor to shave though but that I<br />

seem to see the face of old Squire<br />

Peasley grinning at me from over the<br />

door transom."<br />

"Fine if true," said Brakeman<br />

Carey, as he slid down from the fireman's<br />

seat box. "After a yarn like<br />

that we should be able to make up this<br />

half hour we have lost waiting for<br />

the circus to pass and go into Hudson<br />

on time. There goes the board. Give<br />

her the gun."<br />

Preserving Our Most Precious<br />

Possession<br />

By W. T. Brown, Storekeeper<br />

Dickerson Run, Pa.<br />

•ipO a normal human being the most<br />

precious thing is life. Life in a<br />

body free from deformities and not<br />

handicapped by crippled limbs is a<br />

glorious thing, to be desired above<br />

everything else.<br />

Many a man would gladly give all<br />

his worldly possessions if he could rectify<br />

one thoughtless mistake which<br />

resulted in his losing an arm or a leg.<br />

There are just two things in life which<br />

are really worth while—life and happiness,<br />

either of which is jeopardized<br />

by disregarding the simple Safety<br />

First rules which have been formulated<br />

for our observance.<br />

It is not such a great hardship for<br />

a man to wear his goggles when engaged<br />

in work which may cause injury<br />

to his eyes. It may take just a<br />

little longer. It is not so hard to play<br />

safe when jacking a car. Nor does it<br />

take such a great amount of self control<br />

for a trainman to resist the temptation<br />

to kick a knuckle. The little<br />

things that come up every day can be<br />

done safely nearly as easily as otherwise.<br />

And it is the carefulness that<br />

is used in doing these little things that<br />

keeps the Safety records clean. And<br />

what a difference it makes! To some<br />

men it may mean the difference between<br />

life and death or the difference<br />

between happiness and wretchedness.<br />

Safety and carefulness are synonymous.<br />

The careful man is the safe<br />

man. And he reaps far more than<br />

anything of monetary value.<br />

Each man has certain moral obligations<br />

towards his fellow men. The<br />

courts are recognizing this more every<br />

day in holding motor drivers criminally<br />

liable for injuries to pedestrians.<br />

We cannot go through this life<br />

continually disregarding the rights of<br />

our neighbors. This applies to the<br />

man who works beside you. The<br />

thought that through some careless<br />

act of yours, any man or his family<br />

should suffer should be enough to<br />

deter you from doing anything which<br />

might cause injury to a fellow workman.<br />

To do your work as safely as possible<br />

should be a great satisfaction,<br />

and then, if the worst should happen<br />

and someone is injured, you can say,<br />

"Not through any fault of mine."<br />

The goal of the New York Central<br />

Lines has been set high, but not too<br />

high for the P. & L. E., as shown by<br />

the latest comparative statement<br />

showing that we have attained second<br />

place in our group. One more step<br />

and our present goal will have been<br />

reached.


86 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

A<br />

What the Kadi© Manufacturers Offer<br />

i^The Freed^Eiseinan NM^60<br />

FEW days ago a prospective<br />

member of the Order of Radio<br />

Fans asked the writer, "What<br />

constitutes a good radio?"<br />

I promptly answered, "A radio set<br />

in order to be called good must have<br />

selectivity, sensitivity and good tonal<br />

quality."<br />

This did not satisfy the questioner<br />

and lo and behold, he popped the question<br />

all radio men are trying to dodge,<br />

"What is the best radio set?"<br />

That is a hard one to answer. As<br />

a matter of fact I would say that it is<br />

impossible to answer it truthfully. A<br />

better question would be, "What sets<br />

do you consider<br />

good that cost<br />

around $100 (or<br />

whatever price you<br />

mi ght want to<br />

spend).<br />

But so far as the<br />

best set in radio—•<br />

there is no such<br />

set. Your set,<br />

your neighbor's set,<br />

your best friend's<br />

set, each is the<br />

"best" set in radio<br />

today. Whether it<br />

cost $50 or $500,<br />

it's the best set because<br />

it's yours.<br />

In this article<br />

(which is the first<br />

of a series) I am<br />

going to give the<br />

results of a test<br />

given to the new<br />

Freed - Eiseman<br />

NR-60 electric set. This is one of the<br />

good sets that cost $160. The photograph<br />

shows the set with a Peerless<br />

speaker. Freed-Eiseman is to be congratulated<br />

on turning out such a set<br />

as this one. Model NR-60 is a onecsntrol<br />

receiver that has selectivity,<br />

sensitivity and excellent tonal quality.<br />

The cabinet is made of mahogany and<br />

is of a very neat design that will harmonize<br />

with almost any living room.<br />

The power unit is contained in the<br />

cabinet with the set and is designed so<br />

that it does not affect the efficiency of<br />

the receiver. Both set and power unit<br />

are completely shielded.<br />

The big feature of the NR-60 is a<br />

device called an inductor (which is a<br />

tapped variometer) that aids the set<br />

owner in eliminating interference on<br />

Freed-Eiseman NR-60 electric set with Peerless speaker<br />

the low waves and is a big help when<br />

searching for distant stations. Using<br />

an aerial of 100 feet in length all locals<br />

were logged, with stations in<br />

Pittsburgh, Baltimore, Atlantic City,<br />

Springfield and Philadelphia, while<br />

the numerous local New York stations<br />

were broadcasting. At 10:30 P.M.,<br />

real distance started coming through.<br />

Antennae of different lengths were<br />

tried and the set still worked efficiently.<br />

On a strip of wire ten feet in<br />

length Nashville was logged.<br />

The Peerless speaker used while<br />

testing this outfit worked excellently.<br />

No matter how much volume was<br />

turned on, the speaker retained its<br />

sweet and mellow qualities. Inside<br />

this speaker is a filter which protects<br />

the speaker. The Peerless costs $35.<br />

CeCo tubes were used during the<br />

period of test and are recommended by<br />

this department. The CeCo tubes on<br />

test have given longer life than any<br />

other tubes tested.<br />

An interesting experiment was tried<br />

on the NR-60. The ground connection<br />

used was attached to a radiator<br />

about ten feet away from the set. Another<br />

ground was connected to the receiver<br />

and louder signals were received<br />

on distant stations. Eight ground<br />

connections were used in all, which<br />

increased the range of the receiver.<br />

Next month—The Steinite Electric<br />

Set.<br />

Laboratory<br />

Notes<br />

V E R Y good<br />

cure for a motor-boatingreceiver<br />

is to use an<br />

Eveready Layerbilt<br />

battery in connection<br />

with the B<br />

eliminator. The<br />

B-minus of the B<br />

battery should be<br />

connected to the<br />

B-m i n u s of the<br />

eliminator. The detector<br />

voltage<br />

should be taken<br />

from the B battery<br />

and not from the<br />

eliminator. The<br />

Layerbilt Eveready<br />

battery _ is<br />

recommended because of its long life.<br />

These batteries are constructed differently<br />

from any other battery on the<br />

market today. The cells instead of<br />

being cylindrical are flat or layer<br />

built, one on top of each other. Their<br />

life exceeds that of most heavy duty<br />

batteries.<br />

There has been a question in the<br />

minds of some radio fans as to whether<br />

an automobile six-volt battery could<br />

be used as a radio A battery. A<br />

Gould automobile battery has been<br />

connected to a radio set in the laboratory<br />

and results have been excellent<br />

so far. The battery has been connected<br />

only for two weeks. See next<br />

month's laboratory notes for further<br />

results.<br />

The 1928 Centrola (five or six<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

87<br />

tubes) is quite a receiver. Distant<br />

stations have been received on an Ail "A" Eliminator That Every Fan Can Build<br />

;ierial forty feet in length. The July ACHAT'S the matter, Joe, why 29 Drilled Base Board.<br />

issue will give full details on this set. W , „, 30 Metal Cover.<br />

*<br />

This department is only too glad<br />

to answer questions pertaining to<br />

your radio set, but please give full<br />

details such as make of set, circuit<br />

employed (if you know it), number<br />

of tubes, kind of tubes, age of your<br />

tubes, length of aerial, kind of wire<br />

used on aerial, age of the aerial, kind<br />

of batteries used and age of batteries.<br />

Have you had the set repaired at any<br />

time? To what is your ground connected?<br />

Write in your troubles and<br />

we'll try to help. Also write in your<br />

experiences, so they can be told to<br />

other readers.<br />

v<br />

SO glum.' 3 1 A c Line Attachment Cord with Plugs.<br />

"Well, the storage battery that be- 32 Output Cord for connecting to set with<br />

I<br />

For The Good of Radio<br />

T is just around this time of the<br />

year that radio fans will start<br />

hearing, "This is the last of the<br />

Iodine hours for this season. The<br />

Iodine Company, sponsors of these enjoyable<br />

Iodine hours, will be back on<br />

the air the second week of September.<br />

Until then the Iodine Company (sponsors<br />

of the Iodine hour) bid you all<br />

farewell."<br />

Each year this happens. Toward<br />

the end of May and during the first<br />

few weeks of June many sponsors of<br />

these programs sign off until September.<br />

And then there is so much good<br />

entertainment that you miss half of it.<br />

Now there is a remedy for this falling<br />

off of these hours, and the radio<br />

fan himself can be the doctor. Here's<br />

the cure: Write to the stations to<br />

which you listen and tell them that<br />

you would like to hear the Iodine hour<br />

during the summer months.<br />

Get all your friends to write in to<br />

the different stations. These letters<br />

are always forwarded to the sponsors<br />

of these hours. The reason, according<br />

to the donors of these programs, that<br />

these hours are discontinued is that<br />

fans don't "listen in" during the hot'<br />

weather.<br />

In a way you can't blame the manufacturer<br />

who supports the program<br />

for feeling that way, as he receives<br />

very few letters of encouragement.<br />

It's up to the set owner, so now,<br />

go to it! Get your pen out and write<br />

a letter today to the sponsors of the<br />

hours that you enjoy. Tell everybody<br />

to write. It's for your pleasure and<br />

also for the good of radio.<br />

Next month a four-tube portable set<br />

will be described. This set can be used<br />

with 201-A tubes or the 199 type. Not<br />

alone is this outfit good as portable,<br />

but it can be used as set for the living<br />

room.<br />

Free Booklet<br />

An interesting booklet may be obtained<br />

from Electrad, 175 Varick<br />

Street, New York City, free of charge<br />

by writing and mentioning the New<br />

York Central Lines Magazine.<br />

This booklet gives the popular B<br />

eliminators and power amplifiers of<br />

today. It is called "What B Eliminator<br />

Should I Build?"<br />

longs to my radio went 'west' last 3 3 F 1 S 1 5 wire.<br />

night and I have to get another bat- * * *<br />

tery. But do you know that I hate The smaller parts come in envelopes<br />

to buy another one. I'm tired of o n -which are printed the contents,<br />

charging it and adding water and item number and on which parts the<br />

having all that muss that goes with a contents are to be used.<br />

wet 'A' battery." J} 0 not attempt to open all envelopes<br />

"I had the same experience myself, and then pick parts at random; rather<br />

Joe, about a month ago and I bought follow instructions and assemble each<br />

myself an 'A' eliminator that is abso- individual sub-assembly at one time.<br />

lutely dry, requires no water, and op- if the metal cover touches the AC<br />

erates without the slightest hum." pi ug connector, it should be insulated<br />

"You see, Jack, I was afraid to get by means of a piece of cardboard cut<br />

one of those devices because I didn't to fit over the prongs of the AC conknow<br />

how efficient they were. What nector. This is important, as if it<br />

kind have you?" touches there may be a short circuit.<br />

"It's a Knapp 'A' eliminator and it if the connections are made corcomes<br />

in kit form. I assembled it in rectly you will find that your receiver<br />

about ninety minutes and it was a i s ready for immediate operation on<br />

cinch. First time I ever tackled any- the throw of the toggle switch. This<br />

thing like that, but I took my time, switch also controls a "B" eliminator,<br />

checked up all connections carefully which may be plugged into the top<br />

and before I knew it I was finished connection. The unit works equally<br />

with it." well with "B" batteries or an elim-<br />

"That seems to be a good bet. Think inator.<br />

I'll get one. But wait; you know I When tuning the set on or off use<br />

have an eight-tube set. Will it work the switch on the Knapp "A" power,<br />

an outfit with that many tubes?" Leave your switch on your set "on"<br />

"Sure it will! Take down the address at all times and throw the switch of<br />

of the firm that manufactures these the eliminator to start or stop the set.<br />

kits. It's the Knapp Electric Cor- The resistance unit and top plate<br />

poration, Port Chester, New York." switch are used to supply the proper<br />

So Jack bought an "A" eliminator "A" voltage for all receivers up to<br />

kit and upon opening it found thirty- eight tubes. If the flexible plug conthree<br />

parts, each tagged with its item nector is placed on stud 1, then the<br />

number for identification. The parts lowest available voltage and current<br />

a r<br />

e: are obtained; and in like fashion maximum<br />

output is realized where the plug<br />

Item Name Symbol j s inserted in post 8. For best results<br />

1 Transformer A a re]i able voltmeter should then be<br />

2 Rectifier Unit R tried until the voltmeter reads 6, when<br />

Condenser<br />

C a p a C<br />

t y<br />

'<br />

. .. C-l all tube filaments of the receiver are<br />

4 Choke Coil with 6 brass spacers L-l burning. A 6-volt supply is correct<br />

5 Special high capacity "A" Power for all sets employing 201-A, 112 and<br />

Condenser C-2 171 type tubes. After this adjust-<br />

6 Choke Coil — .......1^-2 ment has been found no further volt-<br />

7<br />

8<br />

Drill Base Plate (Copper"d<br />

Drilled Top Plate (Brown Bakelite with<br />

studs in place).<br />

m 6 t e r<br />

°J /"enticm to the<br />

POWer unit IS needed.<br />

For small sets, say those using<br />

9 Contact Plate (with mounting bracket). three or four tubes, it may be neces-<br />

10 Transformers<br />

and Nuts<br />

Mounting Screws s a ry to install a 6 or 10-ohm rheostat<br />

. Envelope No. 1 j n t h g „ A„ m i n u g j e a (j g 0 t<br />

1 1<br />

"stews 0<br />

( L " .<br />

1 )<br />

.-.<br />

. MOUnt<br />

EnvelopeNo. 2 reduce the output voltage to 6.<br />

12 Rectifier Fastening Nuts.. Envelope No. 3<br />

13 Nuts for fastening wire to rec- Whv Not a Tnne GnntrnlO<br />

tifier on underneath side of V»uy i>Ol a lone control.<br />

14<br />

t 0<br />

a t e<br />

P P'<br />

Plug for "B" Eliminator<br />

Envelope No. 4<br />

Envelope No. 5<br />

» . t<br />

WW<br />

E bear much ree-ardine- a suit-<br />

, , mucn regaramg a suit<br />

t t<br />

15<br />

16<br />

Nuts for holding Transformer<br />

Top Leads Envelope No. 6<br />

Screws and Washers for mounty<br />

7<br />

able volume control, but very<br />

little about a tone control. Yet the<br />

j a e r i g a l m o s t a s important as the<br />

ing Choke Coil (L-l) to Top m .<br />

Plate Envelope No. 7 former. There are times when we<br />

17 Screws and Spacers for mount- want sharp, crisp reproduction, such<br />

ing Transformer to Top « , i j i • i<br />

Pl| t e Envelope No. 8<br />

a s f o r<br />

speeches, band and jazz selects<br />

H & H Toggle Switch... Envelope No. 9 tions, and weak signals, while at other<br />

19 Screws, Nuts and Washers for times we want mellow, soft, entranc-<br />

mountmg Contact Plate to . , . , ,<br />

Top Plate Envelope No. io m<br />

20<br />

21<br />

2 2<br />

S vocal and instrumental rendition.<br />

Terminals EnvelopeNo.il A tone control, therefore, is necessary<br />

Condenser Mounting Bracket to remove the higher frequencies<br />

Screws Envelope No. 12 which are responsible for the sharp,<br />

"str e<br />

ew?^ (L<br />

: 2)<br />

. MOUntm<br />

23<br />

24<br />

25<br />

n d<br />

lnve.opeNo.i3 f»*p/ ^ / disagreeable quall<br />

t y o f s o m e<br />

Bottom Plate Mounting loudspeakers. The Sim-<br />

Screws Envelope No. 14 piest tone control comprises a volume<br />

Nuts and Washers for Ter- control clarostat in series with a Vi<br />

minal Posts Envelope No. 15 condenser, the combinations<br />

Resistance Umt Envelope No. 16 being shunted across the loudspeaker<br />

26 bwitch Post Connector. . . Envelope No. 17 - j ! m • i . ,, r<br />

27<br />

,<br />

Screws for fastening metal cover XTl<br />

V^t- Turning the knob of the clar*<br />

to Base Board Envelope No. 18 stat serves to increase or decrease<br />

28 Condenser Mounting Brackets. sharpness.


Which Case?<br />

Horton—What did the judge do at<br />

the bootlegger's trial when one of the<br />

bottles offered in evidence was found<br />

to contain water?<br />

Hopper—I understand he threw the<br />

case out of court.<br />

The Height of Ego<br />

"Is he self-centered?"<br />

"Self-centered? Why, that guy<br />

thinks 'Hail, Hail, the Gang's All<br />

Here' is a solo!"<br />

Private Circulation<br />

"Dear, may I print a kiss upon your<br />

beautiful lips?"<br />

"Yes, if you promise not to publish<br />

it."<br />

Illogical<br />

St. Peter was interviewing the fair<br />

applicant at the Pearly Gates.<br />

"Did you, while on earth," he asked,<br />

"indulge in necking, petting, smoking,<br />

drinking or dancing?"<br />

"Never!" she retorted emphatically.<br />

"Then why haven't you reported<br />

here sooner? You've been a de; i one<br />

for some time."<br />

His Passion<br />

Family Friend—Doesn't that young<br />

surgeon who comes to call on Clara<br />

ever want to take her out?<br />

Mrs. Smith (ruefidly)—No—all he<br />

wants is to take her tonsils out.<br />

Drunk With Joy<br />

Tom—Were you over at Fred's<br />

house the other night when he put up<br />

his home-brew?<br />

Tim—Yes, we had a corking good<br />

time.<br />

A Secret<br />

Old Man Biango—Why do you turn<br />

out the electric light every time you<br />

call to see my daughter?<br />

Young Romeo—Well, she wants me<br />

to keep the engagement dark.<br />

Who's Who<br />

Elsie—There's a man at the door,<br />

Pa, who says he wants to see the boss<br />

of the house.<br />

Pa—Call your mother.<br />

Ma {calling down the stairs)—Tell<br />

Bridget.<br />

Matter of Taste<br />

He—My ideal of a wife is one who<br />

can make good bread.<br />

She—My ideal of a husband is one<br />

who can raise the dough in the hour<br />

of knead.<br />

On Again—Off Again<br />

Mike (on his deathbed)—Bridget,<br />

me darlin', Murphy owes me $5.<br />

Bridget—Ah, poor man, rational to<br />

the end.<br />

Mike—An' O'Hara owes me $3.<br />

Bridget—Rational to the last.<br />

Mike—O'Brien owes me $7.65.<br />

Bridget—Shure an' it's a miracle,<br />

rational to the last.<br />

Mike—An' I owe Dugan $200.<br />

Bridget—Arrah, he's ravin' again!<br />

Oh, Johnny!<br />

Sunday School Teacher—We should<br />

never do in private what we would<br />

not do in public.<br />

Bad Boy—How about taking a<br />

bath, teacher?<br />

As Good as Mimeographed<br />

First Colored Lady—Dat baby ob<br />

yours am de puffec image of his<br />

daddy.<br />

Second Colored Lady—He suh am.<br />

He am a reg'lar carbon copy.<br />

The Quick and the Dead<br />

Forbes—When did they close the<br />

coffin of the deceased?<br />

Maddox—Last night — during the<br />

wake. Some dry agents came to raid<br />

the house.<br />

Sermons in Stoves<br />

An Alabama darkey was telling a<br />

friend of a certain church service he<br />

had attended.<br />

"De preacher wasn't feelin' so good<br />

last Sunday," he said, "an' he made<br />

de stove preach de sermon."<br />

"Made de stove preach?"<br />

"Yessuh; made it red hot from top<br />

to bottom an' den he tells de sinners<br />

to take a good look at it an' go to<br />

thinkin'!"<br />

Sarcasm Plus<br />

He—The girl I marry must be one<br />

who can take a joke.<br />

She—That's the only kind you could<br />

ever get!<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Ad Valorem<br />

"What's the matter with your wife?<br />

She's all broken up lately."<br />

"She got a terrible jar."<br />

"What happened?"<br />

"Why, she was assisting in a rummage<br />

sale, and when she took off her<br />

new hat, somebody sold it for thirty<br />

cents."<br />

They Rushed for It<br />

"Someone shouted 'fire' in our<br />

apartment house the other night."<br />

"Did all the tenants rush out?"<br />

"You bet! They rushed out and<br />

hunted for it. We had been shivering<br />

for a week."<br />

One Thing and Another<br />

Ted —- I saw a man swallow a<br />

sword!<br />

Sam—That's nothing, I saw a man<br />

inhale a camel!<br />

Somewhere Out West<br />

He—I'm a little stiff from bowling.<br />

She—Where did you say you were<br />

from?<br />

A Stuffed Date<br />

Bob—Did you fill your date last<br />

night?<br />

Matt—I hope so. She ate everything<br />

in sight.<br />

He Tried<br />

"How come you paid that lunch<br />

check?" asked the wife of a man who<br />

had luncheon with a business friend.<br />

"I didn't intend to but when we<br />

went to the cashier's desk he just outfumbled<br />

me, that's all."<br />

Not Good to Drink, Either<br />

Frater—Isn't that hair tonic in the<br />

green bottle?<br />

Also—No, that's mucilage.<br />

Frater—I guess that's why I can't<br />

get my cap off.<br />

Sharply Dull<br />

A scissors grinder stopped in front<br />

of a house. "How's business, Tony?"<br />

asked the mistress.<br />

"Fine!" said he, "I never saw things<br />

so dull in all my life."<br />

Instructions<br />

Husband—Shall I fix that window<br />

shade?<br />

Wife—Yes, make it snappy.<br />

The Wife With the Smile<br />

"I hear that Jones, who married a<br />

telephone girl, now has triplets."<br />

"He might have expected she'd give<br />

him a wrong number."<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 89<br />

Saving Future Mepair Bills by Building a<br />

IRusfeProof House<br />

OU could pay the national<br />

debt of the United States<br />

in twenty years with the<br />

amount that could be saved by ending<br />

the loss caused by unnecessary<br />

rust—replacing with copper the iron<br />

that is used in the wrong places."<br />

These are the words of Arthur Brisbane,<br />

famous editor, speaking of that<br />

insidious enemy of the home owner—<br />

rust.<br />

It is estimated that this destructive<br />

force costs home owners in the United<br />

States $575,000,000 yearly. Demon<br />

Rust attacks softly, day by day. None<br />

of the dramatic rush and roar of fire<br />

warns of his coming. He waits on<br />

roof, over porch, along the rainpipes,<br />

at doorlock, hinge, lighting fixture,<br />

window screen and water pipe, ready<br />

to despoil. He necessitates the tearing<br />

down of walls quite often, for a<br />

roofleak or a burst water pipe is<br />

usually hidden behind plaster. One<br />

little rust spot in a water pipe, bursting<br />

the pipe, can cause hundreds of<br />

dollars worth of damage to walls, furniture,<br />

and rugs.<br />

But his attack can be met successfully<br />

by the wily house builder.<br />

Through the use of copper, brass and<br />

bronze wherever metals are needed,<br />

the house is rust-proofed. The home<br />

builder, for instance, who uses the<br />

house plan shown as New York Central<br />

Lines Magazine Plan No. 5 may<br />

protect his home at every corner and<br />

in every crevice where Demon Rust<br />

may lurk. Its sturdy, solid walls of<br />

common brick under a roof of mottled<br />

green and purple, rigid asbestos shingles<br />

make it as pleasing in color effect<br />

as in the design and layout which<br />

have made it so popular a plan with<br />

members of Home Owners Institute.<br />

A copper roof will ably meet the<br />

assaults of heat and cold, rain and<br />

snow, and provide no spot where<br />

Demon Rust may take hold. The immunity<br />

of copper to chemical attack<br />

insures a high resistance to corrosion<br />

by air, water, and other agencies.<br />

Types of Copper Roofing<br />

A copper roof may be placed on<br />

your home in one of several forms.<br />

The batten or ribbed type, its ribs<br />

running with the slope of the roof, is<br />

one. Another is the standing seam<br />

type which provides amply for the<br />

movement of the metal due to changes<br />

in temperature. The flat seam type<br />

requires a soldered joint. The copper<br />

shingle is the fourth type. These<br />

shingles are light in weight, hence are<br />

easily applied to the roof. Copper<br />

Spanish tile is a rather recent development<br />

in roofing. Still another<br />

form of roofing is the so-called copper<br />

clad shingle of extra heavy insulating<br />

base with an application of a wearing<br />

surface of copper. Like other forms<br />

of copper, the elements do the "painting"<br />

of these copper-clad shingles, the<br />

soft green patina which forms naturally<br />

being a permanent coating of<br />

protection.<br />

By L. Porter Moore<br />

President, Home Owners Institute, Inc.<br />

Wherever nails are used on the roof,<br />

they should be of copper, for they do<br />

not rust and allow shingles to drop<br />

out of place as do ordinary nails. Copper<br />

lightning-rods, properly grounded,<br />

will protect against possible fire from<br />

lightning. Those quaint ornaments,<br />

weather-vanes, are often of copper.<br />

Sixteen-ounce copper should be used<br />

for flashing the vulnerable points of<br />

any roof. Leaders, gutters, and rainpipes<br />

should be of this rust-proof<br />

metal. Where special architectural<br />

effects are desired, wooden gutters<br />

lined with copper, or lead-coated copper<br />

gutters are desirable.<br />

Rust-Proofing the Pipes<br />

Rust-proofing within the house is<br />

as important as on the roof where the<br />

elements assault the house most assiduously.<br />

The unseen hot and cold<br />

water lines will not taint drinking<br />

water or stain hot bath and laundry<br />

water if brass pipe is installed.<br />

Exposed lanterns and out-door<br />

lights such as that on the lintel-post<br />

which bids your guests welcome may<br />

well be of copper.<br />

For beautification as well as utility,<br />

bronze, brass and copper have long<br />

been honored metals. The beauties of<br />

Russian samovars, Benares brass,<br />

Turkish coffee pots, Chinese kettles<br />

are well known to us.<br />

Bronze (specially strengthened copper)<br />

non-rusting screen cloth at doors<br />

and windows will not rust and admit<br />

insects through small rust holes, as<br />

will ordinary screening. Brass for<br />

exterior hardware takes a high polish<br />

and often outlasts the house itself, as<br />

witness the fine old knockers and<br />

latches on Colonial houses still in existence.<br />

Bronze, too, comes in for its<br />

share of commendation for both exterior<br />

and interior hardware.<br />

How to Get Your<br />

Specifications<br />

S a service to home builders<br />

A the New York Central Lines<br />

Magazine has arranged to procure<br />

complete working drawings and<br />

specifications for the home shown<br />

for any of its readers at the low<br />

cost of $25 for the first set and $5<br />

each for additional sets.<br />

A choice of hundreds of other<br />

plans is possible to readers through<br />

the plan service of Home Owners<br />

Institute, Inc., 441 Lexington Avenue,<br />

New York City. A letter to<br />

the Institute or to the editor of the<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine<br />

will bring a quick response.<br />

Rust attacks within the house as<br />

without. It pits the metal under plating<br />

or enamel on lighting fixtures if<br />

that metal is ferrous. Copper, bronze<br />

and brass lighting fixtures take a variety<br />

of finishes and hold those finishes<br />

during long, hard service. Brass and<br />

bronze plates are useful as decorative<br />

concealments at electric switch and<br />

convenience outlets.<br />

Copper will be used in the electric<br />

wiring.of .your house whether you specify<br />

it or not, for-aside from the fact<br />

that it is the best known electrical<br />

conductor, it is rust-proof in these<br />

wires as elsewhere.<br />

The advantages of an entirely rustproofed<br />

house may be had at small<br />

extra expenditure over that for rustable<br />

metal, an additional $300 being<br />

the estimated cost of rust-proofing<br />

the house featured in this article.<br />

This investment would soon be returned<br />

to the home builder in the savings<br />

in repair and replacement bills<br />

he would experience. The non-rusting<br />

metal "stays put" because it continues<br />

to give good service throughout the<br />

lifetime of the house.<br />

The five rooms of New York Central<br />

Lines Magazine House No. 5 may<br />

be brightened, as may any home, with<br />

brass and copper and may be protected<br />

in parts which would otherwise receive<br />

attention only from Demon<br />

Rust.<br />

The House of the Month<br />

This design by R. W. Rumenell, Jr.,<br />

architect, of Courtenay, Florida, is<br />

most unusual in architectural effect<br />

and in interior layout. An individuality<br />

of design is seen in the arches<br />

at its entrance porch and the common<br />

brick wall which connects house<br />

and garage, giving the garden a sense<br />

of intimacy similar to that of the<br />

"walled-in" garden of other days.<br />

The housewife who is tired of steps<br />

should like the one-floor arrangement<br />

of this bungalow type of residence.<br />

From the entrance porch, one steps<br />

into the large living room with fireplace<br />

on the long center wall and windows<br />

directly facing it. In a house<br />

of this character, steel casement windows<br />

are especially fitting and add<br />

to the fire-proof qualities of the building<br />

as well as giving that extra portion<br />

of sunlight and air for which the<br />

steel casement window is known.<br />

Here as elsewhere throughout the<br />

house, walls of hydrated lime plaster<br />

put in a backing of woven metal lath<br />

will be crack-proof, vermin-proof and<br />

sound-proof, three important points<br />

touching the pocketbook and the comfort<br />

of the home builder.<br />

The nearly square dining room, a<br />

shape well liked because of the ease<br />

with which it accommodates dining<br />

furniture, gives easy access to the<br />

kitchen, as it should. Here the back<br />

of the sink under the kitchen windowis<br />

low so that while Mother washes<br />

the dishes she may look outside into<br />

the sunlit yard. But unlike the sinks


Sketch, sectional drawing and floor plan. Including garage, for the English type b<br />

ungalow described here. An outline of<br />

specifications recommended is given on page 91<br />

it «riv« C<br />

h n<br />

It tf°l \ £-, S<br />

° l 0<br />

\ t h<br />

?<br />

overT It<br />

over it. It is of that standard height,<br />

one yard from the floor, which is now<br />

recognized as a normal, back-saving<br />

a l p l a n d o e s n o t c a l 1 f o r a<br />

? basement<br />

n a s m u c h a<br />

i * the house was intended<br />

for such a climate as Florida The<br />

home builder who lives above th-<br />

Mason-Dixon line will certainly want<br />

T j , , ,<br />

Laundry tubs are shown in the<br />

kitchen also, for the architect's origito<br />

excavate a cellar. This mav easily<br />

be done without changing the plan Tin<br />

any way except that furnace hot-<br />

water heater, and fuel supply will be<br />

placed, of course, more conveniently<br />

in this part of the house.<br />

Such a basement will greatly enlarge<br />

the living capacity of the house<br />

also, for new red-jacketed insulated<br />

boilers are dust-tight and so keep the<br />

basement free of clinging ash dust.<br />

Ntw York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

I ha built-in chimney-fed incinerator<br />

burns all trash and garbage to a crisp,<br />

thus doing away with the necessity of<br />

tilling it in the cellar awaiting city<br />

collectors. So with these two pieces<br />

of equipment removing the previous<br />

annoyances of the cellar and with<br />

•tee! basement windows letting in a<br />

plrntitude of air and light, the basement<br />

has become a habitable part of<br />

the house. Heating pipes leading to<br />

radiators upstairs are neatly covered<br />

with asbestos pipe covering to connerve<br />

heat.<br />

11 will be. noticed that the bathroom<br />

i directly next to the kitchen in this<br />

lningalow. This arrangement proves<br />

to lie a real money saver in building,<br />

[or water-lines and waste pipes are<br />

not situated at distances necessitating<br />

double plumbing lines. Bathtub, toilet,<br />

and lavatory are especially designed<br />

in units, giving this room an<br />

affect of oneness. Inasmuch as brass<br />

pipe, which does not rust and corrode<br />

l lie water which passes through it, is<br />

installed in this house, the danger of<br />

: l,lining these plumbing fixtures is<br />

less than formerly. As a further protection<br />

against such stain, tub and<br />

lavatory bowl are covered with acidresisting<br />

enamel, a new development<br />

In safeguarding fixtures for long life.<br />

Both bedrooms are corner rooms<br />

and receive an ample supply of air<br />

through two windows diagonally<br />

across from each other. Closets for<br />

clothing are provided in each bedroom.<br />

Throughout the house numerous<br />

electric convenience and lighting outlets<br />

show that a nationally known<br />

electric wiring system has been installed.<br />

As the electrical servants of<br />

ibis modern age take over more and<br />

more the duties of the maid-of-allwork,<br />

outlets must be provided for<br />

their use. The vacuum cleaner must<br />

lie used with the same facility in bedroom<br />

and hallway as in the living<br />

room. Provision must be made in the<br />

kitchen for an electric motor to beat<br />

cakes and eggs and bread; in the<br />

breakfast nook for auxiliary cooking<br />

units such as toasters, percolators,<br />

and grills; in the living room for ex-<br />

I ra lamps beside bridge table, reading<br />

chair, and piano. Only a wiring syslem<br />

planned by electrical engineers<br />

could fulfill these necessities.<br />

Specifications Recommended<br />

An outline of the specifications<br />

recommended by Home Owners Institute<br />

on this house, providing for a<br />

basement, reads as follows:<br />

MASONRY—Concrete footings under all<br />

walls, as shown on drawings. All foundation<br />

walls to be of poured concrete or concrete<br />

block made with Portland cement. Concrete to<br />

be mixed with waterproofing compound. Foundation<br />

walls may be of common brick, laid in<br />

one to three Portland cement mortar, at owner's<br />

option. Walls of common brick, laid in<br />

mortar above specified. All brick work shall<br />

have at least one full header course in each six<br />

courses. Steel basement windows of standard<br />

sizes with cam-acting latch and double contact<br />

weathering shall be used.<br />

INCINERATOR—Built-in incinerator to be<br />

installed in chimney, with receiving hopper door<br />

located in or near the kitchen for disposal of<br />

garbage and trash.<br />

CARPENTRY—All framing lumber shall be<br />

well seasoned and free from large knots, either<br />

Douglas fir or yellow pine. California white<br />

fine for exterior millwork and interior trim;<br />

Mk floors: steel bridging for floor joists. In­<br />

terior doors and built-in kitchen cabinet as required<br />

in detailed specifications.<br />

ROOFING—Roof of rigid asbestos shingles;<br />

styles, thickness, colors, sizes and shapes as<br />

specified; to be laid in accordance with manufacturer's<br />

instructions.<br />

METAL WORK—Gutters, rain-pipes, valleys<br />

and flashings to be sixteen-ounce copper.<br />

CASEMENT WINDOWS—To insure maximum<br />

light and air, steel casement windows in<br />

single or multiple units with transom as shown<br />

on drawings are recommended. All corners to<br />

be electrically welded; all muntins to be flush<br />

on both interior and exterior faces. Malleable<br />

iron or solid bronze hardware to be used.<br />

Frames to be anchored with continuous angles.<br />

Bronze screens recommended.<br />

PLASTERING AND LA<strong>TH</strong>ING—Threecoat<br />

work over metal lath is recommended. A<br />

less expensive job may be obtained through the<br />

use of one-half inch of plaster over flat rib<br />

expanded metal or wood lath. Insulating lumber<br />

or plasterboard may be used if desired by<br />

owner.<br />

ELECTRICAL WORK—Complete system<br />

of electric wiring from meter to all outlets, including<br />

panel boards, junction boxes and all<br />

other fittings. The installation must be in accordance<br />

with the rules and regulations of the<br />

National Board of Fire Underwriters.<br />

LIGHTING FIXTURES—Lighting fixtures<br />

shall be correctly designed to harmonize with<br />

architectural details; rustproof metals recommended<br />

and quality of finish to be considered.<br />

PLUMBING—A complete system and fixtures<br />

ready to use shall be provided, as shown<br />

on plans and in accordance with local regulations.<br />

Brass piping for hot and cold water<br />

lines. Gas or coal fired hot water heater.<br />

//"^|<strong>TH</strong>ICH is worth more, Mr.<br />

*^ Rentpayer, a bunch of rent<br />

receipts showing money gone into the<br />

landlord's pocket or a set of building<br />

and loan mortgage payment receipts<br />

which give you a home of your own<br />

free and clear at the end of eleven<br />

years?"<br />

These words ring in my ears as I<br />

return home from the public-speaking<br />

contest held by young people of New<br />

York City engaged in building and<br />

loan work. In that contest the enthusiasm<br />

of these members for the work<br />

they are doing in helping the small<br />

salaried man to possess his own home<br />

rang true and sure.<br />

The answer to the above question<br />

which one young man addressed to his<br />

audience so earnestly is being given<br />

year after year in increasing numbers<br />

by home builders who know of the<br />

work of building and loan associations<br />

in their behalf. Since that time nearly<br />

one hundred years ago when seventeen<br />

friends in a little town in Pennsylvania<br />

pooled their resources in order<br />

that one of their number might<br />

purchase a house, thousands of home<br />

seekers have been helped by building<br />

and loan associations into homes of<br />

their own.<br />

You, too, can get this help if you<br />

will but save and ask for it. For the<br />

building-loan association is no closed<br />

corporation but is rather an organization<br />

whose very fundamental is the<br />

assistance of its members into financial<br />

independence—into a home of<br />

their own. To become a member one<br />

has only to open an account in the association,<br />

and this anyone can do, for<br />

with its years of growth the buildingloan<br />

association has not grown into a<br />

«r -t 1<br />

91<br />

Where sewer connections are not available use<br />

of reinforced concrete septic tank recommended.<br />

TILE WORK—Tile floor and wainscot in<br />

bathroom, with built-in china accessories.<br />

HEATING—Steam or hot water red-flash<br />

sectional boiler, thoroughly and indestructibly<br />

insulated—for hard or soft coal, coke, oil or<br />

gas. All steam mains and returns, and all hot<br />

water lines to be insulated with three-ply, crosscorrugated<br />

asbestos pipe covering; fittings to<br />

be insulated with three-fourth-inch asbestos cement;<br />

all applied in accordance with manufacturer's<br />

instructions. Thin tubular radiators<br />

recommended; air valves where necessary.<br />

TEMPERATURE CONTROL—Heat regulator<br />

with eight-day or one-day clock thermostat,<br />

limit control on boiler or furnace and<br />

electric or spring motor.<br />

HARDWARE—Owner shall furnish all hardware.<br />

Exterior hardware shall be rustproof.<br />

Hinges for entrance doors shall be of the ballbearing<br />

or anti-friction type equipped with roller<br />

pins. Designed hardware to be of forged iron<br />

in Tulip or Warwick design unless otherwise<br />

specified. Garage hardware shall be sliding and<br />

folding type, depending on type of opening, delivered<br />

complete in original box.<br />

PAINTING—Strictly pure white lead and<br />

linseed oil in proper proportion, with zinc oxide<br />

where desired, or a good grade of ready-mixed<br />

paint shall be used. Interior trim to receive<br />

two good coats of flat paint and one coat of flat<br />

enamel. Finished floors to be varnished or<br />

waxed throughout as directed.<br />

INSULATION—Throughout with insulating<br />

building board or insulating quilting if preferred<br />

; used as plaster base on second floor<br />

ceiling operates as roof insulation.<br />

T h e Best Lesson T a u g h t b y a B u i l d i n g a n d<br />

L o a n A s s o c i a t i o n<br />

By Isabella F. Henderson<br />

snob and boosted the amounts which<br />

make membership possible. As small<br />

a sum as one dollar a month still procures<br />

that coveted membership with<br />

its eventual privilege of asking for<br />

help in home financing. And unlike<br />

the dues of club or organization, these<br />

membership dues paid in monthly are<br />

not swallowed up in "club activities"<br />

but grow into a sizeable savings account<br />

as the months go by. Always<br />

accessible to the saver in case of illness<br />

or necessity, such savings give<br />

a sense of security impossible without<br />

that substantial thing which mid-Victorians<br />

called "backing." The building<br />

and loan membership account furnishes<br />

that "backing."<br />

Possibly the best result, other than<br />

the actual money it accumulates, is the<br />

habit of thrift which membership in<br />

the building-loan association instills<br />

into one. For only through thrift,<br />

only through steady month-by-month<br />

saving, can enough capital be accumulated<br />

to expend the large sum necessary<br />

to acquire a home.<br />

Home Mortgage No Disgrace<br />

Even beyond this matter of thrift,<br />

the building-loan teaches many another<br />

lesson. Perhaps the most important<br />

one it has taught during its<br />

hundred years of operation is that<br />

the borrowing of money for a home<br />

is not a disgrace. Rather, it is a business<br />

transaction similar to a purchase<br />

of furniture or clothing. No other<br />

agency has contributed as generously<br />

to the cause of raising the head of the<br />

home buyer so that he is not ashamed<br />

or afraid to request a mortgage loan.<br />

Another of its important lessons has<br />

been that the actual carrying of a


92<br />

mortgage on a home is not a disgrace.<br />

Here again, the public has learned<br />

that mortgages are good business<br />

propositions and are to be regarded<br />

as such. No longer do modern plays<br />

use the theme of the young runaway<br />

of the family returning just at the<br />

moment when the auctioneer's hammer<br />

was about to fall ... a sheaf of<br />

bills in his hands and the words, "Save<br />

the old home" on his lips. In this,<br />

the twentieth century, the old home<br />

has been saved by the building-loan<br />

associations long before the boy left it<br />

to seek his fortune in the great world.<br />

Dad was able to pay off that mortgage<br />

by his regular monthly payments to<br />

the association. He found out long<br />

ago that it was just as easy as paying<br />

rent.<br />

How Easy Is Rent Paying?<br />

That brings back to my mind that<br />

ardent young speaker whom I mentioned<br />

at the first of this article. How<br />

easy is it to pay rent? Easy enough<br />

if you let your money slide gracefully<br />

out of your pocket into that of another<br />

without a qualm. But few of us are<br />

made that way. We prefer to get<br />

something for our money. The tabulation<br />

given below shows exactly how<br />

much money you are putting into the<br />

landlord's pocket, plus the usual 6 per<br />

cent interest in case you still are paying<br />

rent. Few families are paying<br />

less than $30 a month. Indeed, I do<br />

not know where they will go in the<br />

environs of New York and pay as little<br />

as that. However, just for purposes<br />

of comparison we have started our<br />

table with that amount.<br />

WHAT <strong>TH</strong>E RENT RECEIPTS TAKE<br />

OUT OF YOUR POCKET<br />

Rent per<br />

month 10 years 15 years<br />

$30.00 $4,745.04 $8,379.27<br />

35.00 5,535.88 9,775.82<br />

40.00 6,326.72 11,172.78<br />

50.00 7,908.40 13,965.46<br />

75.00 11,862.60 20,948.19<br />

100.00 15,816.80 27,930.92<br />

20 years<br />

113,242.78<br />

15,449.91<br />

17,657.04<br />

22,071.30<br />

33,106.95<br />

44,142.60<br />

Consider that $30 monthly rent. In<br />

ten years it has grown to $4,745.04.<br />

What a healthy start that would be<br />

on a home! Perhaps you haven't<br />

thought of spending as high as $15,000<br />

for a home, but if you are now paying<br />

$100 a month rent, in ten years' time<br />

you will have spent more than $15,000.<br />

As an actual investment in a piece of<br />

land and a house of your own, what<br />

would that mean to you! It would<br />

mean a substantial asset in monetary<br />

value, and it would mean also that<br />

most coveted possession—your own<br />

home. Home, where you've watched<br />

the youngsters grow from babyhood<br />

to boy and girlhood; home, where<br />

you've watched the sweetheart of<br />

your youth mature into contented and<br />

glorious womanhood; home, where at<br />

the end of the business day you have<br />

come for comfort and for happiness.<br />

"It takes a heap of living to make a<br />

house a home!" as Edgar Guest puts<br />

it. Start that living in your own home<br />

early. Pile up in that secluded spot<br />

the thousand happy memories you<br />

want to keep for white-haired days.<br />

He Didn't Want To Move<br />

I am reminded of a little chap of<br />

about eight who some years ago moved<br />

into the house next to mine. Looking<br />

over the board fence the summer<br />

morning after the vans had left, I saw<br />

him sitting digging mournfully in the<br />

gravel with a stick, the tears rolling<br />

down his cheeks.<br />

" 'Smatter, Sonny?" I inquired.<br />

Ashamed of being discovered, he manfully<br />

put up a dirty little paw to wipe<br />

the tears away, but at the first word<br />

only started crying afresh and in a<br />

louder key.<br />

"I was growing radishes," he<br />

sobbed. "They was growing swell."<br />

"You can grow radishes here," I<br />

consoled. But long and bitter experience<br />

spoke in his next sentence . .<br />

" 'Tain't no use," he said, "we'll only<br />

move again." The following autumn<br />

proved he was right . . . poor little<br />

philosopher. You see he had put his<br />

roots into the soil along with those<br />

radishes; it was hard pulling them up.<br />

Now it is my contention that that<br />

little fellow deserved a back yard of<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

his very own where he could grow<br />

radishes and watch them mature.<br />

For he would put more important<br />

things than radishes into the soil of<br />

that back yard. He would put hope<br />

there and eventually he would take<br />

achievement out of that soil.<br />

Every child will do that, given a<br />

chance. So will every grown-up.<br />

More important things than radishes<br />

will grow in a home, if you give them<br />

a chance. Character grows there, and<br />

love. And these things grow better<br />

in the home in which they are firmly<br />

rooted without fear of upheaval every<br />

spring or fall.<br />

How can you do it? Let the building-loan<br />

show you how. The officer<br />

of any association will gladly talk<br />

over your problems with you.<br />

My thoughts return to the young<br />

orator and his plea to Mr. Rentpayer<br />

for a home instead of a collection of<br />

rent receipts. Which are you piling<br />

up?<br />

Springtime H e l p s i n H o u s e k e e p i n g<br />

PRING fever days are here. All<br />

S of us feel them a little whether at<br />

the office or at home. Naturally, this<br />

month is an apt time to cast about for<br />

ways of lightening the housework.<br />

As if in answer to this desire, a visit<br />

through Homebuilders Exhibit, located<br />

near Grand Central Terminal in<br />

the heart of New York City, has<br />

shown me some new and different<br />

items for the home, all of them laborsaving<br />

in one way or another.<br />

A well-designed garbage can, for<br />

instance, saves both backbending and<br />

much scrubbing. For homes outside<br />

the city limits and far from gas mains,<br />

a gas generator will save keeping the<br />

fire going in the summer for either<br />

cooking or hot-water supply. Many<br />

another device aids in overcoming<br />

spring fever through lightened work.<br />

* * *<br />

A Garbage Can to Save Stooping<br />

By Jennie Moore<br />

An ornamental garbage and trash<br />

can for the kitchen is built to withstand<br />

the hard wear which this<br />

receptacle constantly<br />

gets. A<br />

pedal pressed by<br />

the foot raises<br />

the lid of the<br />

can whenever<br />

refuse is to be<br />

thrown into it.<br />

Its baked enamel<br />

exterior is<br />

easily kept clean<br />

and white, and<br />

trimmings of<br />

red, yellow, or<br />

green add a<br />

touch of color<br />

even to this<br />

humble kitchen helper. The handle of<br />

the can itself always remains outside<br />

and so cannot come in contact with<br />

waste matter.<br />

The particular feature of this can<br />

is that the garbage pail itself and the<br />

container on which it rests are two<br />

separate items, yet the cover clamps<br />

tightly on both, preventing the<br />

spreading of garbage odors. Such a<br />

device saves the housewife's back from<br />

much stooping, and takes care of one<br />

of the objectionable items in housekeeping<br />

in a thoroughly sanitary<br />

manner.<br />

* * *<br />

Gas in the Country-<br />

City conveniences are being found<br />

even in remote country districts these<br />

days of 1928. Through such systems<br />

and appliances<br />

as the gas<br />

generator illustrated,<br />

the<br />

country home<br />

may use gas<br />

for cooking<br />

and for water<br />

heating without<br />

danger and<br />

with ease of operation. This gas,<br />

which may be connected up with stove<br />

or hot water heater even though it is<br />

placed in a separate building 150 feet<br />

away, is made by the use of water and<br />

charcoal or coke only. Where city or<br />

natural gas is not available, such a<br />

gas system is a tremendous convenience,<br />

particularly in the summer,<br />

saving as it does continuous firing<br />

during the summer heat.<br />

* * *<br />

Safety Flue<br />

When the housewife who uses a coal<br />

or wood range suddenly realizes that<br />

her oven isn't baking right and that<br />

soot is ruining her painted kitchen<br />

wall, she knows it is time that the<br />

pipe be taken down and cleaned out<br />

. . . a despicable job which the man<br />

of the house often bungles when he<br />

finally gets around to it.<br />

A safety flue device, so simple in<br />

construction that we wonder why<br />

someone didn't think of it sooner, consists<br />

of a little trap door which may<br />

be opened at will and the soot then<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

raked down into the stove pit. This<br />

is not only a convenience but an actual<br />

protection against possible fires which<br />

often originate from soot-filled pipes<br />

and chimneys.<br />

* * *<br />

Space Heater for Cool Spring Days<br />

Every home owner wants to shut<br />

down the heating equipment as early<br />

in the spring as possible. With two or<br />

three portable heaters for use in bedrooms<br />

and bathroom,<br />

and perhaps dining<br />

room or breakfast<br />

nook, on frosty<br />

spring mornings the<br />

main heating system<br />

can be shut down,<br />

without fear of<br />

catching cold, at an<br />

earlier date than is<br />

possible in the home<br />

without so-called<br />

space heaters. A<br />

small, simply-operated electric heater<br />

that can be hung against the wall or<br />

placed on the floor, has an adjustable<br />

reflector that directs heat wherever it<br />

i-; required. This portable heater may<br />

be had in many colors and is especially<br />

appreciated in the nursery and sick<br />

room during the bathing hour.<br />

Cooking While the Cook Plays<br />

A compact little electric stove standing<br />

just fifty-two inches high plugs<br />

in at the floor electric socket without<br />

extra installation<br />

cost. .Just<br />

as in the<br />

larger electric<br />

ranges, this<br />

little cook<br />

works automatically<br />

while<br />

the mistress of<br />

the kitchen<br />

takes a holiday.<br />

It bakes,<br />

boils, steams,<br />

and fries in its<br />

heavily insulated<br />

ovens,<br />

and its cost of<br />

operation is<br />

low, according<br />

to its manufacturers,<br />

who<br />

have subjected<br />

this new stove<br />

to many hard<br />

tests.<br />

Its two ovens<br />

provide different<br />

degrees of<br />

heat, the lower<br />

one being<br />

equipped with<br />

an 880-watt unit which can be used<br />

underneath for baking or transferred<br />

Y o u r D r e a m H o r n<br />

Some where between the covers of Volume<br />

One—The Books of a Thousand Homes,<br />

.imong the 500 plans shown you will find<br />

iliat perfect brick, stucco, or wood design<br />

in the architectural type you desire. You<br />

will find houses of four to eight rooms.<br />

You will find bungalows, story-and-a-half,<br />

and two-story dwellings,<br />

lit your new home be a model home, as it will<br />

I'i- if you build from a plan offered in this volume.<br />

For the Books of a Thousand Homes,<br />

i dited by Henry Atterbury Smith, contain the<br />

i w cnty-four master plans used by Home Owners<br />

93<br />

above for broiling. All cooking units<br />

are connected with the time control<br />

and operated according to it when the<br />

housewife desires to run errands or<br />

play a game of bridge during the afternoon.<br />

Fully equipped with special pots<br />

and pans to fit the cooking space, this<br />

stove cooks a full meal at one time.<br />

Another feature of the appliance is a<br />

fresh hot water supply available for<br />

tea, coffee, or any other uses and heated<br />

without extra expense while cooking<br />

is being done in the oven.<br />

Do You Know These Points<br />

About Home-building?<br />

Q. What styles of small house architecture<br />

predominate in the United<br />

States?<br />

A. New England Colonial, Dutch<br />

Colonial, Spanish, Mid-Western, English.<br />

Q. Once you have decided to build,<br />

what should your first step be?<br />

A. Seek expert advice from an architect.<br />

Q. Should the home builder use a<br />

plan to build by?<br />

A. Yes, by all means.<br />

Q. How can you obtain a fire-proof<br />

roof?<br />

A. By using clay or cement tile, asbestos<br />

shingles, slate, zinc or copper<br />

roofing.<br />

Q. What size kitchen is considered<br />

architecturally correct for proportion<br />

and for step-saving?<br />

A. Nine by twelve feet.<br />

Institute in building Master Model Homes in<br />

various metropolitan centers of thecountry. Such<br />

demonstration houses have been opened in New<br />

York, Chicago, San Francisco, Atlanta, Washington,<br />

D.C., Portland, Ore., and other cities.<br />

Select your plan from this group or from among the others<br />

in the book. All designs are the work of eminent American<br />

architects. Complete blueprint working drawings and<br />

specifications are available through the Institute at low<br />

cost. Build your house according to the suggestions as to<br />

building materials and methods given in the back of the<br />

book. The coupon below will bring all this to you.<br />

I •<br />

HOME BUILDERS DEPT.<br />

N. Y. Central Lines Magazine<br />

466 Lexington Avenue<br />

New York City, N. Y.<br />

I enclose herewith $3.00 in<br />

cash, check or money order.<br />

Please send me my copy of Vol. I—Books of<br />

a Thousand Homes.<br />

Name<br />

Address


94 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

G-R-S Installs New Type of Car Retarder<br />

at Mechanicville<br />

J<br />

UST five weeks preceding the<br />

time the Selkirk Hump Yard<br />

was placed in service, a similar<br />

installation was completed at Mechanicville<br />

on the Boston & Maine Railroad.<br />

The general principle of operation<br />

of the two yards are about the<br />

same but due to several ruling factors,<br />

the design of these yards are quite<br />

different. As a description of the Selkirk<br />

Yard was given in the February<br />

issue of this Magazine, it is felt that<br />

further information on this interesting<br />

subject and particularly of the<br />

new G-R-S Type B Retarder, as installed<br />

at Selkirk, may be of interest.<br />

Mechanicville, like Selkirk, was formerly<br />

a rider yard. This yard was<br />

built in 1913 and was operated as a<br />

hump yard with riders and hand<br />

throw switches until December 10th<br />

of last year, when the new facilities<br />

were completed.<br />

The design of the Mechanicville<br />

Yard was under the personal supervision<br />

of Mr. George Hannauer, President<br />

of the Boston & Maine Railroad<br />

Mr. Hannauer is also co-inventor with<br />

Mr. E. M. Wilcox, of the first car retarders<br />

installed in this country.<br />

Yard Arrangement<br />

Mechanicville Yard departs from<br />

the conventional hump arrangement<br />

consisting of receiving yard, classification<br />

yard and departure yard, in<br />

that the departure yard is omitted.<br />

The receiving yard lies west of the<br />

classification yard, with a double lead<br />

to the hump. It consists of ten tracks<br />

having a capacity of 737 cars.<br />

With the exception of a slight rise<br />

which forms the "Hump," there is a<br />

continuous down grade from the entrance<br />

of the receiving yard to the<br />

outgoing end of the classification yard,<br />

so that an ordinary eight - wheel<br />

switcher is capable to push all trains<br />

over the hump. The classification<br />

yard consists of thirty-six tracks having<br />

a capacity of 1,930 cars, in addition<br />

to which, there is a transfer<br />

platform and yard with a capacity of<br />

237 cars, a car repair yard with a capacity<br />

of 240 cars, an ice house, stock<br />

pens, and thoroughfare tracks around<br />

both sides of the hump. Through the<br />

design of a new type of retarder possessing<br />

many features of superiority<br />

over former types, greater retardation<br />

was obtained per rail foot which made<br />

possible a new departure in track<br />

grouping and yard layout.<br />

Particular attention is directed to<br />

the hump leads using lap switches as<br />

this arrangement has resulted in quick<br />

traffic distribution and a very fast<br />

yard with the minimum of retarder<br />

footage. There are two retarder units<br />

on the hump incline, a single retarder<br />

unit on each of the three main ladders,<br />

and two retarder units on each<br />

of the six sub-ladders, making a total<br />

of only seventeen retarder units (645<br />

feet).<br />

A general view of the new car retarder installation at Mechanicville, on the Boston & Maine Railroad. Looking from the top<br />

of the Hump, Hump Signal and Conductor's office in immediate foreground; Tower A and Power House on the right of classification<br />

yard and Tower B between tracks 11 and 12 to the left of the main leads.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 95<br />

The thirty-six classification tracks<br />

are divided into six groups, each group<br />

having a sub-lead which comes together<br />

125 feet below the crest of the<br />

hump. With short ladders and the<br />

liberal use of lap switches in a concentrated<br />

area, the length of accelerating<br />

grade is remarkably short.<br />

This feature, combined with the division<br />

of the yard into six groups, thereby<br />

securing quick separation of traffic,<br />

has resulted in a fast switching<br />

machine which can be operated by the<br />

ordinary size switching crew.<br />

Retarder<br />

This retarder embodies many new<br />

features of design and operation<br />

which makes it far superior to former<br />

types. A few of these features are:<br />

1. Equalization of shoe pressure.<br />

2. Toggle lever arrangement of con­<br />

nections.<br />

3. Non-derailment feature.<br />

4. Protection from dragging equipment.<br />

5. Heavier operating parts.<br />

Equalization of shoe pressure is obtained<br />

by a new design and method<br />

of applying pressure to the retarder<br />

shoes. Referring to the drawing, the<br />

solid lines show the position of the<br />

toggle lever, connections and mechanism<br />

in the open position. The dotted<br />

lines show the retarder in closed position.<br />

Equalized shoe pressure is obtained<br />

with the spring and lever connection<br />

to the shoes and shoe beams. For any<br />

one of the four closed positions of the<br />

retarder the cross bar is moved to the<br />

left closing the distances between the<br />

face of the shoes. When the car<br />

wheels pass through the retarder they<br />

force the shoes slightly apart putting<br />

the springs under compression which<br />

in turn exert an equal retarding force<br />

to both sides of the wheels. Unequal<br />

shoe thickness or gauge receives the<br />

same equalized shoe pressure because<br />

the shoe and lever arrangement is<br />

flexible and follow any side movement<br />

of the wheels. The four different degrees<br />

of retardation are transmitted<br />

by the retarder mechanism through<br />

the cross bar to the retarder shoes.<br />

It may be well to again state that no<br />

part of the retarder is under pressure<br />

except when car wheels are actually<br />

in the retarder.<br />

One disquieting factor with retarders<br />

of former design was the adjustment<br />

of shoes for standard spacing of<br />

wheels and operating with wheels<br />

widely varying in their spacing. This<br />

not only caused unequal wear of retarder<br />

shoes but also subjected the<br />

retarder, car wheels, and axles to unnecessary<br />

strain and comnlication in<br />

shoe adjustment. With equalized<br />

pressure these objectionable features<br />

have been eliminated because of the<br />

flexible shoe movement.<br />

Greater power has been .obtained<br />

through the use of a unique toggle<br />

lever arrangement of connections.<br />

This results in a fast movement when<br />

the retarder shoes start to close and a<br />

slower movement with increased pressure<br />

near the closed position. This<br />

fast movement near the open position<br />

gives a quick release or further retardation.<br />

With retarders of former design it<br />

was found when too great a pressure<br />

was used that light cars were sometimes<br />

lifted off the rail resulting in<br />

many cases of a derailment of the car<br />

in the retarder or at the end of retarder.<br />

This resulted in damage to<br />

retarder or switch mechanism and<br />

sometimes to the cars and lading.<br />

The high retarding action made<br />

available in the New Type B Retarder<br />

can be applied to light cars as well<br />

as heavy ones without this danger of<br />

possible derailment. If too great a<br />

pressure should be used by the operator<br />

the retarder will either immediately<br />

stop the car or cause the<br />

wheels to raise off the rail and ride on<br />

the outside shoes. The proper relation<br />

between wheels and rails is maintained<br />

by the inside shoes so that<br />

when the pressure is released the<br />

wheels drop back onto the rails or if<br />

the retarder is kept in a closed position<br />

the wheels merely drop from the


96<br />

Toggle lever, connection*, and method of obtaining equalized shoe pressure.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 97<br />

top of the shoes onto the rail at the<br />

end of the retarder.<br />

The retarder requires but one adjustment<br />

to compensate for shoe wear.<br />

This adjustment is made on the toggle<br />

lever and consists of the lengthening<br />

out on a rod as shoe wear increases.<br />

Shoe beams, made of alloy steel, furnish<br />

ample protection to the retarder<br />

from low hanging column bolts or<br />

dragging equipment. All parts are<br />

heavier so as to withstand the shock<br />

of continued service and with an individual<br />

pressure oiling system the<br />

proper lubrication and long life of<br />

operating parts is insured.<br />

Operation and Performance<br />

Switch-lists of all inbound trains<br />

are written on a Morkrum "Teletype"<br />

machine in the yard master's office and<br />

reproduced simultaneously in the<br />

hump office and the two retarder control<br />

towers. Loudspeaker telephones<br />

connect the hump with both towers<br />

for instant communications between<br />

the conductors and operators. Pneumatic<br />

tubes are being installed to facilitate<br />

the sending of bills and train<br />

lists from the receiving yard to the<br />

yard office and from there to the outward<br />

yard clerk. The yard is lighted<br />

throughout its length by flood lights<br />

on towers so located as to throw the<br />

light lengthwise of the tracks.<br />

The regular humping crew consists<br />

of one engine on the first trick, two<br />

engines on the second trick, and one<br />

engine on the third trick. There is a<br />

conductor and a helper with each engine,<br />

who do their own cutting of cars<br />

at the top of the hump and their own<br />

trimming. The humping engine in<br />

addition to the humping of cars, "cabooses<br />

and doubles" the outgoing<br />

trains, "switches" the transfer and<br />

repair tracks and makes the deliveries<br />

to the Delaware & Hudson.<br />

The entire operation of the switches<br />

and car retarders is controlled from<br />

two towers, so arranged that one man<br />

in a tower can normally handle the<br />

work, or two men can operate in each<br />

tower, dividing the work as peak<br />

periods require. All trains depart<br />

direct from the classification yard, as<br />

there was no opportunity to provide a<br />

departure yard. However, four leads<br />

are provided for doubling trains together,<br />

as the majority of trains go<br />

out with more than one classification.<br />

During the short time in which the<br />

car retarder system has been in service,<br />

freight traffic has been light;<br />

therefore, the record of performance<br />

does not reflect the true capacity of<br />

the yard. Operation so far, however,<br />

indicates a humping speed of 125 cars<br />

per hour with one operator in each<br />

tower, and 200 cars per hour with an<br />

additional operator in each tower.<br />

On Monday, January 9, Mechanicville<br />

Yard, operating at less than 50<br />

per cent of its capacity, handled 1,227<br />

cars. Picking an item from the January<br />

9 record; a seventy-two-car train<br />

arrived at 11:33 A.M., was listed for<br />

switching at 12:21 P.M., was "high"<br />

at 12:40 P.M., and complete at 1:01<br />

P.M. This performance shows an<br />

average humping speed of 18 seconds<br />

per car.<br />

The operation to date has shown a<br />

decrease in yard costs of about 40 per<br />

cent; a decrease of 50 per cent in the<br />

time cars are held in the receiving<br />

yard and a material reduction in damage<br />

to cars in humping; and it is believed<br />

that the combined net annual<br />

savings will be in excess of 50 per<br />

cent of the cost of the entire work of<br />

providing the added facilities.


BUFFALO PAYMASTER'S FORCE WHICH IS REMOVING TO NEW YORK CITY<br />

Left to right: W. J. Matthews, E. H. Rogers, F. Barretto, V. F. Eastabrooks and<br />

K. F. Kunkel.<br />

Buffalo Paymaster's Force is<br />

Banqueted on Departure<br />

HE closing of the Paymaster's of­<br />

Tfice of the New York Central in<br />

Buffalo has brought expressions of regret<br />

from a host of people. The Buffalo<br />

force is now caring for its same<br />

divisions from New York.<br />

A farewell banquet was given in<br />

Buffalo last month for P. Barretto,<br />

Assistant Paymaster, and his staff by<br />

F. J. Gilbert, Chief Timekeeper, and<br />

his office force. Mr. Barretto was presented<br />

with a traveling bag by B. M.<br />

McDonald, Division Engineer, with<br />

the compliments of his many Buffalo<br />

and Niagara Falls friends. A fare-<br />

Big Four Locomotive Fuel Performances<br />

March, 1928<br />

Average Monthly Temperature, 39.2, 1928, 44.9, 1927<br />

u<br />

i s> S« o f * a<br />

is A- \2, i,s ii<br />

1.1


100<br />

The Power of the<br />

Employes<br />

7" J ERE are the answers to questions<br />

i l on page 54, although, considering<br />

the extraordinary bargain you are<br />

getting this month, you ought to be<br />

willing to furnish your own answers.<br />

1. Each employe would have to rustle<br />

$38 in new business.<br />

2. They would have to round up<br />

about six hundred thousand carloads.<br />

Answers Nos. 1 and 2 should help to<br />

convince you that the decline in traffic<br />

has ceased to be a joke.<br />

3. Saving in coal would amount to,<br />

approximately, 152,745 tons, worth<br />

about $397,000.<br />

4. Although the railroads are spending<br />

millions of dollars annually to<br />

eliminate grade crossings, the number<br />

of such crossings actually increased<br />

—yes, increased—2,448 in the two<br />

years 1925-6. So you see that in the<br />

supposititious case we are considering,<br />

the best efforts of all railroad employes<br />

would just about hold the situation<br />

on an even keel, so that the railroads<br />

could eliminate grade crossings<br />

as fast as new ones are created.<br />

5. Capital expenditures, 1920 to 1927<br />

inclusive, aggregated $5,978,296,000.<br />

6. Investment per employe as of<br />

1926 was $13,652.<br />

7. Average net income per employe<br />

was $681.<br />

8. Per cent of net operating income<br />

on investment per worker was 4.99.<br />

9. Railroad investment in 100 years<br />

was $24,000,000,000; investment in<br />

motor vehicles and hard-surfaced<br />

roads in the last twenty-five years<br />

was $29,000,000,000.<br />

10. While the United States has<br />

only 9 per cent of the area and 7 per<br />

cent of the inhabitants of all countries<br />

having railroads, it has more than<br />

one-third of the total railroad mileage<br />

of the world; and our railroads<br />

each year handle more tons of freight<br />

than all the other railroads of the<br />

world combined.<br />

" A l " Bryant Given the "Once<br />

Over" in Albany Paper<br />

LFRED H. BRYANT, Assistant<br />

A Station Master of the New York<br />

Central in Albany, is the subject of<br />

the "Once Over" column of the Albany<br />

Times-Union, March 12. The<br />

brief article printed beneath his picture<br />

reads:<br />

"Al Bryant, night assistant station<br />

master at the Union depot, has been<br />

in the service of the New York Central<br />

Lines for seventeen years, and he<br />

is thinking of writing a story, 'From<br />

Standard<br />

on Leading<br />

Roads Including<br />

New York Central System<br />

General Office & Works : Philadelphia<br />

Offices: New York. Chicago, St. Louis<br />

Freight Brakeman to Station Master.'<br />

"Mr. Bryant hails from Troy. Commendations<br />

for courtesy while he was<br />

a passenger conductor in 1920 gained<br />

him the title 'The Trojan Courtier.'<br />

Al conducts a prosperous newspaper<br />

business in Troy to the envy of his<br />

colleagues, who term him an aggran­<br />

C A R S E A T S<br />

411 Steel<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

dized newsboy, but he laughs it off,<br />

and rakes in the shekels.<br />

"Al's pride is the possession of what<br />

he boasts is the best railroad watch<br />

on the line. Approaching competition<br />

to this time-honored possession is<br />

his new car, in which he cavorts<br />

around Troy."<br />

S t a n d a r d Steel C a r<br />

C o m p a n y "<br />

STEEL and COMPOSITE CARS<br />

For all classes of Service, from our Standard Designs,<br />

or according to Specifications of Purchasers<br />

Steel Car Underframes, Trucks<br />

Bolsters, Brake Beams, Etc.<br />

Capacity 50,000 Cars per A n n u m<br />

Inquiries Solicited<br />

O F F I C E S : N e w York, 120 Broadway<br />

GENERAL OFFICES: Frick Bldg., Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />

Chicago, Tribune Tower<br />

WORKS : Butler, Pa., New Castle, Pa., Hammond, Ind.<br />

T H E F E R R O<br />

C O N S T R U C T I O N C O .<br />

Structural Steel Erectors<br />

Railroad Bridges, Buildings, Roofs, Viaducts<br />

Suite 1030-35 Old Colony Building<br />

Chicago, III.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 101<br />

William Callanan<br />

1LLIAM CALLANAN, Division<br />

Freight Agent of the Boston &<br />

Albany Railroad at Worcester,'Mass.,<br />

passed away at<br />

Worcester Hospital,<br />

where he<br />

had been a patient<br />

for three<br />

weeks, on Tuesday,<br />

March 27.<br />

He was born at<br />

Hopkinton, Mass.,<br />

March 22, 1870,<br />

and after attending<br />

the public<br />

schools went to<br />

William Callanan<br />

Phillips - Exeter<br />

Academy at Exeter,<br />

N. H., where<br />

he was graduated<br />

as an honor man in 1894. He attended<br />

P a n t a s o t e<br />

Trade Mark 11<br />

The National Standard<br />

for Car Curtains and Car<br />

Upholstery Since 1897<br />

Agasote Headlinings<br />

Trade Mark<br />

The only headlining made in<br />

one solid piece. It is waterproof<br />

and will not separate,<br />

warp or blister. Agasote, in<br />

fact, actually improves with age.<br />

The Pantasote Company, Inc.<br />

250 Park Avenue . . . New York City<br />

Peoples Gas Building . . . Chicago, 111.<br />

797 Monadnock Bldg., San Francisco, Cal.<br />

Yale University and was graduated<br />

in 1898.<br />

In January, 1899, he entered the<br />

employ of the Boston & Albany Railroad<br />

in the Foreign Freight Agent's<br />

office, Boston, and had been continuously<br />

in the service of the Boston &<br />

Albany since that time. He was appointed<br />

Eastbound Contracting Agent<br />

for the New York Central Lines at<br />

Boston on December 1, 1907, and had<br />

been Division Freight Agent of the<br />

Boston & Albany at Worcester since<br />

April 1, 1913.<br />

Mr. Callanan was unmarried and<br />

is survived by his father, six brothers<br />

and three sisters.<br />

The funeral was held at Hopkinton,<br />

Mass., at the Church of St. John the<br />

Evangelist, on Thursday, March 29.<br />

A special train ran from Boston to accommodate<br />

his many friends. The<br />

services were likewise attended by a<br />

large delegation of railroad and shipping<br />

people.<br />

Orrin Wolber<br />

^RRIN WOLBER, forty-four, a<br />

New York Central engineman,died<br />

in an ambulance on the way to the<br />

hospital after being taken suddenly ill<br />

during a stopover at Elmira, N. Y.,<br />

March 23. Physicians said that death<br />

was due to intestinal rupture.<br />

Mr. Wolber was apparently in good<br />

spirits when he retired the night before<br />

in the Railroad Y.M.C.A. Early<br />

in the morning he called for assistance<br />

and was hurried to the hospital.<br />

Mr. Wolber's service with the New<br />

York Central began in 1902 when he<br />

became a freight fireman on the Syracuse<br />

Division. He was later promoted<br />

to freight engineman. He is survived<br />

by his widow, two sons and a daughter.<br />

Alfred C. Rupp<br />

£ER an illness of several weeks,<br />

Alfred C. Rupp, fifty-five, New<br />

York Central Supervisor of Tracks,<br />

died at his home in Greenburg, Ind.,<br />

March 22. Death resulted from<br />

Bright's disease.<br />

Mr. Rupp had been a supervisor of<br />

track for the past twenty-three years<br />

and the condition of his section between<br />

Indianapolis and Cincinnati has<br />

often been praised as one of the best<br />

This Shoe<br />

Makes<br />

Your Tire<br />

True<br />

Does the work while the locomotive is in service<br />

In Use on the New York Central Lines<br />

WHEEL TRUING BRAKE SHOE COMPANY, Detroit, Mich.<br />

on the Big Four Route. During his<br />

illness, his Railroad superiors saw to<br />

it that he was made as comfortable as<br />

possible.<br />

Starting in 1889 as a section hand<br />

at Guilford, Ind., Mr. Rupp was promoted<br />

to section foreman in 1896, and<br />

to supervisor of tracks in 1902. He<br />

was very active in church and civic<br />

interests and had served as councilman-at-large<br />

for ten years.<br />

His widow, a sister and a brother<br />

survive him.<br />

Frank Moore<br />

lpRANK MOORE, sixty-six, who for<br />

nearly fifty years served the New<br />

York Central, died in the Herkimer<br />

Memorial Hospital, March 3, following<br />

a brief illness with pneumonia.<br />

Born at Williamsburg, Long Island,<br />

Mr. Moore began work at an early<br />

age, first in a grocery store, then driving<br />

a team and firing on the Adirondack<br />

Railroad when he was eighteen.<br />

In 1881, he became a brakeman on the<br />

Delaware & Hudson, and in 1884, entered<br />

the service of the West Shore<br />

Railroad as a yard brakeman.<br />

In 1899, Mr. Moore was made a<br />

yard conductor at Frankfort, N. Y.,<br />

and finally assistant yard master there<br />

in 1905.<br />

Charles H. Countiss<br />

HARLES H. COUNTISS, in serv­<br />

C ice with the Blue Line and Michigan<br />

Central since 1876, died on<br />

March 19.<br />

Mr. Countiss was born December<br />

29, 1862, and commenced service as<br />

office boy with the Blue Line in No-<br />

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102 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

vember, 1876, at the age of fourteen.<br />

Since then he has been connected with<br />

the Blue Line and Michigan Central<br />

in various capacities, holding the position<br />

of City Freight Agent, Chicago,<br />

at the time of his death.<br />

Mr. Countiss was a loyal and faithful<br />

employe who will be keenly missed<br />

by his host of friends in the railroad<br />

and commercial service, say his former<br />

associates.<br />

N<br />

Nels P. Levine<br />

ELS P. LEVINE, who was senior<br />

rail inspector for the Inspecting<br />

Engineer, New York Central Lines, at<br />

the Gary Works of the Illinois<br />

Steel Company,<br />

passed away suddenly<br />

from the<br />

effect of a heart<br />

attack as he was<br />

entering the steel<br />

works at seven<br />

o'clock the morning<br />

of January<br />

25. He had given<br />

forty-six consecutive<br />

years of able<br />

service to the<br />

Lake Shore and<br />

N e w Y o r k C e n<br />

Nels P. Levine "<br />

tral Lines.<br />

The respect and admiration in<br />

which he was held extended not only<br />

through personal and railway circles,<br />

but also into the steel and rail manufacturing<br />

plants throughout the country,<br />

as was evidenced by the attendance<br />

at the funeral services of a delegation<br />

of officials from the Illinois<br />

Steel Company and by their beautiful<br />

floral tribute.<br />

Mr. Levine was born in Sweden on<br />

April 13, 1866, and came from there<br />

at the age of sixteen directly to Elkhart,<br />

Ind., which has been his home<br />

since that time. He started work for<br />

the L. S. & M. S. in the old T-rail shop<br />

and later became a machinist on frog<br />

and switch work. As rail inspector at<br />

the South Works and Gary Works of<br />

the Illinois Steel Company, he was directly<br />

responsible for the acceptance<br />

of hundreds of thousands of tons of<br />

steel rails, first for the L. S. & M. S.<br />

and later up until the day of his death<br />

for the New York Central Lines.<br />

The funeral services were held at<br />

Mr. Levine's home in Elkhart on<br />

January 27. Three daughters, Hazel,<br />

Helen and Thelma Levine, survive<br />

him.<br />

J<br />

James M. Lyons<br />

AMES M. LYONS, New York Central<br />

Conductor on the New York<br />

& Ottawa Division, died at his home<br />

in Ottawa, March 30, two hours after<br />

an attack of acute indigestion. Mr.<br />

Lyons was fifty-nine, and the oldest<br />

conductor in years of service on his<br />

division.<br />

He began work for the Railroad in<br />

1890, was made a fireman two years<br />

later and a conductor in 1917. His<br />

widow and two brothers survive him.<br />

Arthur Allen<br />

//•JI3IG AR<strong>TH</strong>UR" ALLEN, who<br />

never wore a cap and whose<br />

iron gray hair used to stand stiffly out<br />

from his head as he leaned from the<br />

cab of the Empire State Express, died<br />

March 29.<br />

Engineman Allen made the first<br />

south run of the Empire State Express<br />

and remained in the cab of that<br />

train until his retirement in 1914. He<br />

was eighty-two years old when he<br />

died.<br />

Funeral services were held from<br />

his home in Maspeth, Long Island,<br />

with burial in the St. Michaels Cemetery.<br />

His widow, daughter and<br />

three sons who are in New York<br />

Central service, survive him. Arthur<br />

Allen is a time-keeper on the Railroad,<br />

Robert is a pipe-fitter, and Edward,<br />

like his father, is an engineman<br />

on the Electric Division.<br />

Starting as a fireman on the Boston<br />

& Albany in 1865, Mr. Allen was<br />

promoted to the rank of engineman<br />

on the Hudson Division in 1872. He<br />

was always popular, and many anecdotes<br />

are told of his size and physical<br />

prowess. It was said that in his prime<br />

he found difficulty in going through<br />

doorways, and no one is ever known<br />

to have impugned his ability as an<br />

engineman.<br />

Among the legends that have grown<br />

up around Big Arthur is one that<br />

deals with the<br />

time he ran his<br />

engine off the<br />

bridge into Spuyten<br />

Duyvil creek,<br />

in the early seventies.<br />

The crew<br />

escaped with their<br />

lives and the story<br />

does not indicate<br />

who was culpable.<br />

At any rate.<br />

Big Arthur was<br />

in a quandary and<br />

was given fifteen<br />

Arthur Allen<br />

days by his superintendent<br />

t o<br />

recover the locomotive.<br />

Edward Allen says that his father<br />

Photograph by courtesy Hew Turk Central Railroad<br />

Faster schedules<br />

IN the last three years 39 Class 1<br />

railroads have speeded up 690 individual<br />

train schedules. This greater<br />

speed was obtained without undue<br />

strain or wear. Better lubricants<br />

have contributed to these improved<br />

schedules.<br />

Socony Long Life Oils Maintain Schedules<br />

SDCDNY<br />

flEC-U.S.PAT.OFF.<br />

R A I L R O A D L U B R I C A N T S<br />

Standard Oil Company of New York<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 103<br />

E S T A<br />

RAILROAD LANTERN<br />

for KEROSENE<br />

SIGNALING devices<br />

on a railroad must<br />

be made as infallible<br />

as human ingenuity can<br />

devise. Your Dietz "Vesta"<br />

meets this requirement —<br />

highest dependability—also<br />

more light than you can<br />

get from any other railroad<br />

hand lantern.<br />

Use a "VESTA"<br />

and you'll SEE !<br />

R. E. DIETZ COMPANY<br />

NEW YORK<br />

Largest Makers of Lanterns in the<br />

World — Founded 1840<br />

RAILROAD HAND LANTERNS<br />

FOR ALL PURPOSES<br />

Edward Walsh<br />

immediately secured a diving suit and<br />

went down into thirty feet of water EDWARD WALSH, age sixty-eight,<br />

where his engine lay. First, fasten­ a porter in the Baggage Departing<br />

a rope and then chains about the<br />

ment at Grand<br />

boiler, he was able to have his engine<br />

Central Terminal,<br />

hauled out and repaired. The time<br />

died March 28 at<br />

elapsed was thirty minutes.<br />

the home of his<br />

C. F. Smith, General Superinten­<br />

daughter, Mrs. E.<br />

dent of Passenger Transportation, re­<br />

J. Greany, 2070<br />

members another version of the story:<br />

Belmont Avenue,<br />

"Big Arthur was one of the largest<br />

Bronx.<br />

men on the railroad. He was about<br />

He had been ill<br />

six feet four inches and weighed about<br />

only a few days.<br />

270 pounds. He was well known and<br />

Surviving him are<br />

liked.<br />

two daughters<br />

"My father, William H. Smith, was<br />

and a son.<br />

foreman of the roundhouse at Thirti­<br />

Mr. Walsh eneth<br />

Street and used to tell how once<br />

tered the service<br />

Big Arthur lost his engine bell in the Edward Walsh of the New York<br />

Spuyten Duyvil creek. He was told to<br />

Central & Hudson<br />

get the bell out and somehow he did it. River Railroad in December, 1888. He<br />

"I don't know about the engine was a member of Metropolitan Chap­<br />

part, but engine or bell, the point is ter Veterans' Association.<br />

that he got what he went after. That<br />

was Big Arthur's way."<br />

Mr. Smith and Miles Bronson, Su­ J. Emmet Murphy<br />

perintendent of the Electric Division, UNERAL services were held on<br />

were among the Railroad officials to F Wednesday morning, March 21, at<br />

send messages of sympathy to the Al­ 9:30 A.M., at St. Rose's Catholic<br />

len family, praising highly the record Church, Cleveland, Ohio, for J. Emmet<br />

of Big Arthur.<br />

Murphy, who passed away after a<br />

short illness. His sudden death was<br />

Richard J. Williams<br />

a great shock to his family and many<br />

ICHARD J. WILLIAMS, a retired friends.<br />

M veteran of the Power Department He entered the service of the Lake<br />

at Grand Central Terminal, who, ow­ Shore <strong>Railway</strong> Company on June 1,<br />

ing to illness, was retired on pension 1891, starting in the General Office<br />

February 1, died at his home, 272 Gun Building as elevator boy. He worked<br />

Hill Road, New York City, April 4. diligently from that humble beginning<br />

up to the position of Chief Clerk to<br />

He is survived by his widow, Mrs.<br />

the General Auditor of the New York<br />

Sarah Williams; one son, Ernest; a<br />

Central Railroad. Mr. Murphy was<br />

sister, Mrs. C. H. Young, whose hus­<br />

also Auditor of the Lake Erie & Pittsband<br />

is in the Treasurer's office, and<br />

burgh <strong>Railway</strong> Company for the past<br />

several brothers, one of whom, Charles,<br />

ten years. Several months ago he was<br />

is Chief Engineer of the Yale Club<br />

appointed Special Agent to General<br />

Building on Vanderbilt Avenue, New<br />

Auditor, assuming additional respon­<br />

York City.<br />

sibilities and in this work he was mak­<br />

Mr. Williams was born in England<br />

ing remarkable progress, when he be­<br />

August 21, 1860. He entered the servcame<br />

seriously ill. Mr. Murphy was<br />

ice of the New York Central October<br />

held in high esteem by his superior<br />

1, 1898, as a steamfitter. On Febru­<br />

officers.<br />

ary 1, 1915, he was made steamfitter<br />

He is survived by his widow, son,<br />

foreman, and on July 1, 1918, pipe­<br />

George, and daughters, Marcella, Evefitter<br />

foreman, which position he held<br />

lyn and Jeanette.<br />

until he was retired.<br />

C. H. Hawthorne, who knew Mr.<br />

Williams for more than a quarter of a Silas I. Hoffman<br />

century, says of him: "In all those<br />

ILAS I. HOFFMAN, recently pen­<br />

tS<br />

years I never heard him utter a prosioned<br />

New York Central Agent<br />

fane word or refuse to extend the<br />

of St. Johnsville, N. Y., dropped dead<br />

hand of fellowship to those in need.<br />

in Main Street of that place March<br />

He would go out of his way to do a<br />

19. The cause of his death was un­<br />

favor for those less fortunate than<br />

known. Mrs. Hoffman had died sev­<br />

himself."<br />

eral months ago. Surviving the couple<br />

are a daughter and two sons.<br />

Dennis J. Mullane<br />

Mr. Hoffman was one of the most<br />

fcENNIS J. MULLANE, retired popular men on his division and on<br />

New York Central Engineman, the occasion of his retirement, numer­<br />

who for forty years had been in Railous testimonials and letters of best<br />

road service, died at his home in Syra­ wishes were sent him from friends in<br />

cuse, April 11. His widow, daughter all departments of the Railroad. He<br />

and two grandchildren survive him. started as a clerk at Little Falls in<br />

Starting as a section man, Mr. Mul­ 1874, and became Agent at St. Johnslane<br />

became a brakeman in 1887, fireville in 1880.<br />

man in 1893 and engineman in 1899<br />

on the Mohawk Division.<br />

George Fitzgerald<br />

Stricken with heart disease, George<br />

Eugene McCarthy<br />

Fitzgerald, sixty-five, New York Cen­<br />

Eugene McCarthy, seventy-seven, tral Watchman at Pier 95, New York<br />

retired New York Central employe, City, died before medical attention<br />

died at his home in DeKalb Junction, could be given him, April 15.<br />

April 3, of heart disease.<br />

Mr. Fitzgerald lived in Queens-<br />

Mr. McCarthy started as a laborer borough and had been a member of<br />

in 1874 and was with the Railroad the Astoria police force for twenty-<br />

until his retirement, seven years ago. five years, retiring twenty years ago.


104<br />

F<br />

Nicholas W. Mahar<br />

OR seven years a pensioner of the<br />

New York Central Lines, Nicholas<br />

W. Mahar, one of the old-time section<br />

foreman on the Railroad, died March<br />

5. Although seventy-seven years of<br />

age, to the end he appeared healthy<br />

and active.<br />

Darryheg, Kings County, Ireland,<br />

was his birthplace in 1851. He emigrated<br />

to the United States with his<br />

parents at the age of sixteen.<br />

Two years later he began his railroad<br />

career as a section laborer at<br />

Rensselaer and was promoted to section<br />

foreman at Yonkers ten years<br />

after that. Remaining there but a<br />

few months, he was sent to Fishkill<br />

Landing, then in 1888 was transferred<br />

back to Rensselaer.<br />

In 1904 he came under the supervision<br />

of the Mohawk Division, and<br />

was later removed to West Albany,<br />

where he worked until retired on pension<br />

February 21, 1921.<br />

Among his children are three sons<br />

who are engaged in somewhat the<br />

same occupation as their father.<br />

Richard M. Mahar, with thirty-four<br />

years of service, is supervisor of track<br />

on the Harlem Division, with headquarters<br />

at Pawling. Thomas Mahar,<br />

also with a thirty-four-year record, is<br />

assistant supervisor of track on the<br />

fifth sub-division, with headquarters<br />

at West Albany. Nicholas W. Mahar,<br />

Jr., who has been working twentyone<br />

years for the Railroad, is general<br />

END FORTIUS<br />

Official<br />

L R O A D<br />

IME BOOK<br />

I & COPYRIGHTED BY<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E MANUFACTURERS OF<br />

C R O W N<br />

SHRUNK<br />

O v e r a l l s<br />

U N I O N M A D E<br />

A NewPair Free /<br />

^ if they shx-inli.<br />

C&e C R O W N OVERALL 7nf$. Cor.<br />

LARGEST IN <strong>TH</strong>E WORLD CINCINNATI, OHIO<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

inspector of automatic train stops on<br />

the Lines East. At the time of the MEMBER<br />

elder Mahar's death, his service with<br />

that of his three sons totaled 140<br />

years.<br />

Walter H. Notley<br />

Funeral services were held March<br />

18 for Walter H. Notley, who died of<br />

pneumonia in Elyria, Ohio.<br />

Mr. Notley had been a Conductor<br />

on the Toledo Division and entered<br />

New York Central service in 1892.<br />

His widow, son and several brothers<br />

and sisters survive.<br />

J. M. Lyons<br />

J. M. Lyons, Conductor on the Ottawa<br />

Division, died suddenly March<br />

30 at Utica, N. Y.<br />

Starting as a blacksmith's helper in<br />

1890 at St. Regis Falls, Mr. Lyons<br />

became successively fireman, brakeman,<br />

freight and then passenger conductor.<br />

He is survived by his widow.<br />

C<br />

F e r g u s o n & E d m o n d s o n C o .<br />

RAILROAD CONTRACTORS<br />

Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />

Tugboat Saved from Fire<br />

ONSTANT preparedness was rewarded<br />

recently when Captain F.<br />

VanSchaack and his crew of New<br />

York Central Tugboat 33 saved their<br />

vessel from gasoline flames.<br />

The boat had gone to Bayonne for<br />

fuel oil and had been backed into the<br />

slip according to proper procedure.<br />

As the boat was being made fast,<br />

there was noticed a fine spray coming<br />

from one of the dock pipes, with the<br />

odor of gasoline. The captain promptly<br />

ordered the lines thrown off tha<br />

dock.<br />

In the meantime the gasoline pipe<br />

exploded and splattered gasoline all<br />

over the starboard side of the tug.<br />

The boat was under full control when<br />

it proceeded out of the slip and the<br />

fire was quickly smothered.<br />

The personnel of the tug includes<br />

Captain F. VanSchaack, Engineer T.<br />

G. Murray, Deckhands John Tumulty,<br />

Daniel Finley and B. Savage, and<br />

Oiler T. R. Shade.<br />

A. Reude Helps at Fire<br />

TT is a crisis that brings out the true<br />

worth of a Safety man, as in the<br />

case of A. Reude, Section Foreman at<br />

Kentland, Ind. The following letter,<br />

written him by Superintendent E. W.<br />

Brown, is self-explanatory:<br />

"It has just been brought to my attention<br />

that you and your men were<br />

instrumental in helping to save the<br />

depot at Ade, Ind., on February 21<br />

when the Farmers' Co-operative Elevator<br />

burned.<br />

"I am writing you to express my<br />

appreciation of your work and am<br />

passing the information on to the<br />

Management, as I know they will also<br />

appreciate it."<br />

H<br />

^KELLOGG GROUP<br />

Glee Club Elects<br />

ENRY G. SMI<strong>TH</strong> was elected<br />

Manager of the Glee Club and<br />

Orchestra of the Capitol Chapter of<br />

the New York Central Veterans' Association<br />

at a recent meeting in Albany.<br />

Other officers elected were J. Don-<br />

Ion, assistant manager and director of<br />

the orchestra and band; H. Patterson,<br />

secretary; J. Wylie, treasurer,<br />

and L. Rohloff, director of the Glee<br />

Club.<br />

The following were chosen for the<br />

executive board: J. G. Parsons, superintendent<br />

of shops; A. C. Iveson, general<br />

foreman; G. P. Fox, superintendent<br />

of car shops; J. T. Grow, master<br />

car builder, and C. F. Parson, general<br />

master mechanic.<br />

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FACTORY: ALBANY. N. Y. rf^'h<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

New History of the<br />

Pennsylvania Railroad<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E GROW<strong>TH</strong> AND DEVELOPMENT<br />

OF <strong>TH</strong>E PENNSYLVANIA RAILROAD<br />

COMPANY—1846-1926; by H. W. Schotter,<br />

Assistant Treasurer. Ten illustrations; 518<br />

pages. Philadelphia: the Pennsylvania Railroad<br />

Company.<br />

ssistant Treasurer Schotter<br />

A has produced a model work of<br />

reference in his history of the Pennsylvania<br />

Railroad Company which, if<br />

memory serves, is the third volume<br />

published on the same subject within<br />

the last generation. In a preface<br />

which is a model of brevity, Mr.<br />

Schotter explains that the preparation<br />

of the present work was inspired by<br />

a desire to know more about how the<br />

company grew to its present powerful<br />

position in the field of transportation.<br />

As this information was not available<br />

in condensed form or in chronological<br />

order he was obliged to go back to the<br />

origin of the company more than<br />

eighty years ago and resort very<br />

largely to its annual reports to secure<br />

the data. He makes no reference to<br />

any minor events which are inseparable<br />

from the growth of every large<br />

corporation but confines himself<br />

strictly to a record of the more important<br />

facts.<br />

Research workers in future will owe<br />

a lasting debt of gratitude to Mr.<br />

Schotter for the manner in which he<br />

has marshalled his facts. Every division<br />

of his subject is isolated from<br />

the text by a sub-head and to make all<br />

this still more readily accessible an<br />

index of no less than forty-five pages<br />

has been provided.<br />

The general arrangement is also<br />

admirable. The history of the charter<br />

under which the Pennsylvania<br />

Railroad was organized and developed<br />

is first summarized in eight pages.<br />

Without a superfluous word the author<br />

tells of how Philadelphia lost its commercial<br />

and financial leadership to<br />

New York City upon completion of<br />

the Erie Canal and, to some extent,<br />

to the Baltimore & Ohio Railroad,<br />

which had been constructed as far as<br />

Cumberland, Md., in 1842. It tells of<br />

the disastrous attempt of the State of<br />

Pennsylvania to construct and operate<br />

a line of "public works" across the<br />

State. When the fact that these "public<br />

works" were a total failure, not<br />

only because of heavy financial losses<br />

to the State, but also because of their<br />

inability to attract competitive traffic<br />

between the West and the Atlantic<br />

Seaboard was apparent, the Pennsylvania<br />

Railroad Company was finally<br />

chartered in 1846.<br />

From this point the history is divided,<br />

not in the usual way, but into<br />

the administrations of its ten presidents,<br />

beginning with Samuel<br />

" Everything at One Place "<br />

Complete Equipment for the<br />

HOTEL, RESTAURANT, CLUB, HOSPITAL,<br />

CAFE, DINING CAR, STEAMSHIP, ETC.<br />

Including China, Glass. Silver, Linens, Furniture, Carpets and Rugs,<br />

Kitchen and Bakery Equipment, Refrigerators, Etc.<br />

L. BAR<strong>TH</strong> & SON, Inc., Cooper Sq., New York City<br />

Vaughan Merrick, and continuing to<br />

the administration of W. W. Atterbury,<br />

the present incumbent.<br />

It is an inspiring chronicle of<br />

achievement which is unfolded in the<br />

pages of this volume. President Merrick<br />

and his successor, William Chamberlain<br />

Patterson, were prominently<br />

identified with the industrial and<br />

financial interests of Philadelphia.'<br />

They were the type of men required to<br />

give the project the necessary impetus<br />

and encourage subscription to the<br />

capital stock of the company. They<br />

were followed by John Edgar Thomson,<br />

who as Chief Engineer, located<br />

and began construction of the road<br />

from Harrisburg to Pittsburgh and<br />

later as President laid the foundation<br />

of the present Pennsylvania Railroad<br />

System in its greatest period of expansion<br />

from 1852 to 1874. At the<br />

close of his administration the system<br />

embraced a territory westward from<br />

the Atlantic Seaboard to the Mississippi<br />

River and from the Ohio and<br />

Potomac Rivers on the south to the<br />

Great Lakes on the north. This is<br />

practically the same territory that is<br />

served by the Pennsylvania Railroad<br />

of today, growth and development of<br />

the system since 1874 being largely<br />

internal; but what a growth it has<br />

been!<br />

Send fori C \ C \ H O M E<br />

105<br />

The author is quite within the<br />

bounds of truth in saying that the<br />

Pennsylvania Railroad "has since continued<br />

to be the greatest single factor<br />

in the material prosperity of Pennsylvania.<br />

The fact that this State leads<br />

all others in the Union so far as industrial<br />

and railroad developments<br />

are concerned is to a great extent due<br />

to the courage and foresight of those<br />

men who planned and constructed the<br />

Pennsylvania Railroad."<br />

Diabolism in a Tale of Horror<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E HOUSE OF DR. EDWARDES. By<br />

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the substance of the plot.<br />

But it is not so much the reader<br />

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106<br />

throughout most of the book—she is<br />

carried through a series of harrowing<br />

episodes. In fact, the tale is more<br />

one of horror than of mystery, with<br />

diabolism, the fetish of the real lunatic,<br />

as the leading motive.<br />

Fast Movement of Freight on<br />

Mohawk Division<br />

N exceptional freight train movement<br />

last month on the Mohawk<br />

Division has been brought to attention<br />

by Superintendent H. Scott.<br />

Extra 2753, with Conductor W.<br />

Steinback and Engineman G. Wood<br />

left DeWitt at 8:23 A.M. April 9 with<br />

125 cars (fifteen cars of coal), tonnage<br />

7,541.<br />

The train passed Utica at 9:58<br />

A.M.; Herkimer, 10:32 A.M. (took<br />

water at Herkimer) ; Little Falls,<br />

11:18 A.M.; St. Johnsville, 11:43<br />

A.M., and Hoffmans at 1:17 P.M.<br />

The train arrived in Selkirk Yard at<br />

3:35 P.M., covering the division in<br />

seven hours and twelve minutes and<br />

meeting with no delay, except fifty<br />

minutes at South Schenectady, cutting<br />

out a car with a hot journal, and<br />

thirty minutes at Herkimer, taking<br />

water.<br />

No stop was made for coal or any<br />

purpose other than indicated above.<br />

(Concluded from page 30)<br />

their sons would never steal or lie—<br />

no, yet they would commit crimes<br />

against womanhood.<br />

"It is due partly to the fact that<br />

there is a, lack of moral restraint.<br />

Young men feel that they are merely<br />

violating a statute of the state, and<br />

the fear of God or influence of the<br />

church does not enter into the matter.<br />

"The solution of the problem, as I<br />

see it, lies in bringing the boy to realize<br />

that his home is a real place for<br />

him, that it will keep him from bad<br />

company. Then, it is up to the parents<br />

to make a pal of their boy, to see<br />

that he will confide in them and trust<br />

their judgment."<br />

The speech-making was interspersed<br />

with entertainment under the direction<br />

of Harry M. Mills. "Cookie"<br />

Bowers proved an inimitable imitator.<br />

He took both parts in a duet with an<br />

imaginary Galli-Curci and impersonated<br />

a number of characters. He was<br />

warmly applauded.<br />

Several selections were sung by<br />

Madame Aldrich, formerly with the<br />

Metropolitan Opera and a star performer<br />

in "The Miracle." She also was<br />

popular and recalled for three encores.<br />

The excellent dinner and service were<br />

the more enjoyable for the oTchestra<br />

music that was played throughout the<br />

meal and afterward for the dancing<br />

that lasted until midnight.<br />

A novelty in the decoration of the<br />

ballroom was a reproduction on the<br />

speakers' stand of the rear platform<br />

of the Twentieth Century Limited.<br />

The platform was constructed by<br />

Lloyd Butterfield, a clerk on the Syracuse<br />

Division, has been used at several<br />

Veterans' meetings and was presented<br />

to the Metropolitan Chapter.<br />

Mr. Wooldridge, who has been reelected<br />

President of the Chapter, will<br />

be assisted by the following officers:<br />

"PRESIDENT<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

CK-<br />

'w'.vv. 73t?odheae><br />

Sr.rr. YrAQK- Sv*T. G. C T-<br />

Familiar faces at the bowlers' banquet in New York City, April 17<br />

Truman G. Case, Vice-President; G. E.<br />

V. Osborne, Secretary - Treasurer;<br />

Frederick T. Slack, Historian; Executive<br />

Committee—Mr. Wooldridge, J.<br />

D. Laughlin, T. Picken, G. H. Wilson,<br />

F». M. Backus, Truman G. Case, John<br />

Denboer, J. K. Lovell and Mr. Osborne.<br />

Great Pity<br />

First Theorist—So many people are<br />

unhappily married.<br />

Second Theorist—Yes, and the pity<br />

of it is, so many of them do not<br />

know it.<br />

Another Pipe Smoker The Honor Roll<br />

John Kane,** Crosing Watchman, Little<br />

Falls, N. Y.<br />

J. Kenmy, Engineman, Electric Divi­<br />

Voices Tobacco Joy<br />

sion.<br />

J. Kircher, SS-B, Albany, N. Y.<br />

E. G. Kline, Patrolman, Buffalo Di­<br />

in Flowery Verse<br />

vision.<br />

F. H. Lackey, Crossing Watchman,<br />

Churchville, N. Y.<br />

When a man writes poetry it's a<br />

sure sign he's in love with someone—or<br />

something. Some men are<br />

inspired by beautiful womanhood,<br />

some by a gorgeous sunset. Here's<br />

a man inspired by his favorite |NE of the prime requisites of a<br />

smoking tobacco:<br />

successful railroad man is vigilance.<br />

Watchfulness and alert atten­<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E B L U E TIN CAN<br />

tion to details constitute the main fac­<br />

F. D. Lake, Agent, Fancher, N. Y.<br />

Joseph Layocono, Crossing Watchman,<br />

Albion, N. Y.<br />

J. H. Lentz, Conductor, Jersey Shore,<br />

Pa.<br />

R. P. Lentz, Sectionman, Pennsylvania<br />

Division.<br />

W. H. Leoffler,** SS-20, Fort Plains,<br />

N. Y.<br />

W. E. Lininger, Telegraph Operator,<br />

Cataract, Pa.<br />

T. Mahoney, Conductor, Belle Isle,<br />

I've tried the brands from every<br />

clime;<br />

Choice mixtures with Perique;<br />

But long—oh, long ago! I learned<br />

The only brand to seek.<br />

Each day our useless worries mount,<br />

Our evenings to provoke;<br />

But through the alchemy of fire<br />

They vanish into smoke.<br />

They vanish when our spirit holds<br />

No enmity toward man,<br />

And smoke the sunshine bottled up<br />

In Edgeworth's Blue Tin Can.<br />

tors in the safe operation of trains. N. Y.<br />

One of the pleasantest things the su­ J. F. McClure, Telegraph Operator,<br />

pervisory officers of the various com­<br />

Dresden, N. Y.<br />

J. R. McHenry, Yard Brakeman. Newpanies<br />

of the system have to do is to<br />

berry Junction, Pa.<br />

commend employes who show in spe­ E. S. Mclnroy,* Telegraph Operator,<br />

cific, outstanding cases that they pos­ BX Signal Station.<br />

sess a ready eye and quick mind by F. McLaughlin, Brakeman, Selkirk,<br />

noting impaired conditions of rails or N. Y.<br />

equipment.<br />

Robert McMinn,** SS-13, Amsterdam,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Below are given the names of the Peter Motz, Section Foreman, Wheat-<br />

men who recently have won in this ville, N. Y.<br />

way special commendation from their E. L. Moyer, Patrolman, Buffalo,<br />

superiors for actions that have helped N. Y.<br />

to prevent accidents.<br />

J. J. Mullen, Conductor, Medina, N. Y.<br />

So smoke away! This loyal friend<br />

Is void of bite or sting<br />

Line East<br />

For He is monarch of a world James Aiello, Frankfort, N. Y.<br />

Where Happiness is King.<br />

Joseph Aldi, Section Laborer, Mohawk<br />

Division.<br />

Irving H. Walker,<br />

Newark, N. J.<br />

April 7, 1927<br />

T. E. Baker,*** Agent, Barnes, N. Y.<br />

R. S. Bates, Operator, Keenes, N. Y.<br />

H. Becker,**** SS-13, Amsterdam,<br />

The best way to learn what you like<br />

about this smoking tobacco is to put it<br />

N. Y.<br />

F. S. Beedleson,*** Operator, Canajoharie,<br />

N. Y.<br />

in your pipe and F. E. Blanchard, SS-33, Oriskany,<br />

smoke it.<br />

N. Y.<br />

To those who have<br />

never tried Edge-<br />

B. Callard,* Telegraph Operator,<br />

Eagle Harbor, N. Y.<br />

L. D. Carter, SS-11, Hoffmans, N. Y.<br />

worth, we make this N. W. Cook, Conductor, Rochester<br />

offer:<br />

Let us send you<br />

Yard, N. Y.<br />

E. Curran,* Telegrapher,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Savannah,<br />

free samples of L. E. Drumb, Operator, Matoon, N. Y.<br />

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that you may<br />

put it to the pipe<br />

test. If you like<br />

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you'll like Edgeworth<br />

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and whenever<br />

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Write your name and address to<br />

Larus & Brother Company, 27 S. 21st<br />

Clifford Dun, Crossing Watchman,<br />

Albion, N. Y.<br />

E. H. Engler, Telegraph Operator,<br />

Tioga, Pa.<br />

P. H. Fennell,* Agent, Watkins Glen,<br />

N. Y.<br />

J. F. Flannery, Telegraph Operator,<br />

Lockport, N. Y.<br />

H. E. Fleming, SS-1, Albany, N. Y.<br />

G. Gallagher, Signal Station "X,"<br />

Dykemans, N. Y.<br />

G. Gamble, Conductor, Corning, N. Y.<br />

A. B. Gardner,**** SS-24, Little Falls,<br />

N. Y.<br />

F. L. Graves, Telegraph Operator,<br />

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N. Y.<br />

T. M. Highland, Yard Master, Ontario<br />

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W. D. Hurd, Telegraph Operator,<br />

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107


108 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

m<br />

•<br />

Martin Murphy, Express Truckman,<br />

St. Johnsville, N. Y.<br />

W. F. Naatz, SS-44, Kirkville, N. Y.<br />

C. E. Palmer, SS-48, Syracuse Division.<br />

O. Pellegrini,* Section Foreman, Albany,<br />

N. Y.<br />

J. A. Powell, Telegraph Operator,<br />

Larrys Creek, Pa.<br />

J. H. Prime, SS-B, Albany, N. Y.<br />

H. J. Pudney, Brakeman, Syracuse<br />

Division.<br />

E. V. Putnam, Conductor, Selkirk,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Benjamin Quance, Crossing Watchman,<br />

Newark, N. Y.<br />

J. H. Rathburn, Yard Clerk, Gouverneur,<br />

N. Y.<br />

H.^A.^Reynolds, Operator, Middleport,<br />

M. J. Rocklin, SS-16, Fonda, N. Y.<br />

A. Rummel, Car Inspector, Niagara<br />

Falls.<br />

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F. F. Seamans, Telegraph Operator,<br />

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A. E. Sheffer, Maintainer, Albany,<br />

N. Y.<br />

W. F. Slingerland, SS-SK, Selkirk,<br />

N. Y.<br />

George E. Spencer, Freight Brakeman,<br />

Corning, N. Y.<br />

O. Stonebraker, Brakeman, Jersey<br />

Shore, Pa.<br />

H. T. Thackrah, Maintainer, Albany,<br />

N. Y.<br />

C. A. Tracey, Conductor, Albany, N. Y.<br />

C. G. Toles, Telegraph Operator,<br />

SS-CH.<br />

B. Valentine, Crossing Watchman,<br />

Albany, N. Y.<br />

F. G. VanDeventer, Agent, Junius,<br />

N. Y.<br />

C. D. VanDerwagen, Canandaigua,<br />

N. Y.<br />

Thomas Walsh, Crossing Watchman,<br />

Little Falls, N. Y.<br />

George Warner, Operator, Spencerport,<br />

N. Y.<br />

F. Weaver, Foreman, Albany, N. Y.<br />

C. J. Wells, SS-4, West Albany, N. Y.<br />

W. K. Wood, Operator, Gasport, N. Y.<br />

F. Wyllie, Yard Brakeman, Selkirk,<br />

N. Y.<br />

L. H. Yandeau, Conductor, Rochester<br />

Yard.<br />

H. W. Zulch, SS-20, Fort Plain, N. Y.<br />

Line West<br />

C. F. Gardner, Patrolman, Erie, Pa.<br />

Harry J. Knollman, Lieutenant of Police,<br />

Erie, Pa.<br />

A. Rheude, Section Forewian, Kentland,<br />

Ind.<br />

H. R. Rudd, Sergeant of Police, Erie,<br />

Pa.<br />

Ohio Central<br />

G. M. Seafler, Brakeman, Charleston,<br />

W. Va.<br />

Big Four<br />

W. G. Badger, Brakeman, Brightwood,<br />

Ind.<br />

E. B. Barker, Brakeman, Cleveland<br />

Division.<br />

G. W. Crume, Brakeman, Mattoon, 111.<br />

E. W. Hogue, Conductor, Cleveland<br />

Division.<br />

O. O. Jellison, Engineman, Wabash,<br />

Ind.<br />

Joseph Larrison, Sectionman, Chicago<br />

Division.<br />

William Lidgett, Bridge Foreman,<br />

Galion, Ohio.<br />

W. A. Shook, Section Foreman, Grafton,<br />

Ohio.<br />

E. O. Thaxton, Brakeman, Bellefontaine,<br />

Ohio.<br />

H. N. Whittlesey, Brakeman, Brightwood,<br />

Ind.<br />

Dr. George M. Brown, of 207 North<br />

Walnut Street, Bay City, Mich., has<br />

been appointed Company Surgeon for<br />

the Michigan Central Railroad Company<br />

at that point, to succeed Dr. M.<br />

R. Slattery, who resigned.<br />

There is not a tool constructed<br />

which will do useful work, which will<br />

not cause injury also, if used improperly.<br />

Set a good example by<br />

being careful yourself.<br />

—H. C. Osborne, P. & L. E.<br />

Against Accident and Illness Use<br />

CONTINENTAL Protection<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E SERVICE SUPREME<br />

When you are sick or injured, in<br />

time of trouble and distress, doctors'<br />

bills and no wages.<br />

CONTINENTAL SERVICE may be<br />

depended upon.<br />

A CONTINENTAL POLICY MEANS<br />

PEACE OF MIND AND A PAY<br />

CHECK WHEN EARNINGS<br />

FROM YOUR OCCUPATION ARE<br />

STOPPED.<br />

CONTINENTAL representatives<br />

may be found on every railroad division<br />

in the United States and <strong>Canada</strong><br />

Continental<br />

Casualty Company<br />

H. G. B. ALEXANDER, President<br />

Cfjicago<br />

General Offices: Chicago,U.S. A.<br />

Canadian Head Office: Toronto<br />

T H E B A N K<br />

<strong>TH</strong>AT MAKES YOU FEEL AT HOME.<br />

FRIENDLY ATMOSPHERE, FAIR TREATMENT.<br />

WE MAKE IT COMFORTABLE TO BANK WI<strong>TH</strong> US.<br />

e C I T I Z E N S N A T I O N A L B A N K<br />

CHARLESTON - . . WEST VIRGINIA<br />

Depositary of the United Statu and New York Central Lines<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Lodge Men, Friends, Employes<br />

Honor R. H. Seabrandt<br />

1T» H. SEABRANDT, General Yard<br />

Master of the New York Central<br />

at Cleveland, was retired on pension<br />

March 1, after forty-six years in railroad<br />

service.<br />

He started his career with the old<br />

Lake Shore at Collinwood as a section<br />

laborer in July, 1881, and the<br />

following winter worked at Collinwood<br />

Engine House with a gang fueling locomotives<br />

by hand. In 1883 he became<br />

a laborer at Collinwood Transfer<br />

House and served at various jobs<br />

until August 7, 1885, when he transferred<br />

to switch tender. September<br />

6, 1886, he was promoted to yard<br />

brakeman and March 2, 1888, yard<br />

conductor. On November 1, 1893, he<br />

T o d d Facilities<br />

Are U n e q u a l l e d<br />

Ft. H. Seabrandt<br />

9HE facilities of this Organization<br />

with its six great<br />

was appointed assistant yard master<br />

and November 9, 1899, was promoted<br />

to yard master, continuing in that<br />

capacity until December 24, 1903,<br />

when he was appointed assistant general<br />

yard master, working nights.<br />

January 1, 1914, Mr. Seabrandt was<br />

shipyards strategically located<br />

along the coast lines of the<br />

appointed General Yard Master at<br />

Cleveland, which position he held until<br />

his retirement. In September, 1917,<br />

United States make Todd Serv<br />

ice of the utmost importance.<br />

as a result of a derailment, Mr. Seabrandt<br />

was injured, necessitating amputation<br />

of his leg.<br />

With wide experience in<br />

building, repair and Deisel En­<br />

Mr. Seabrandt's retirement came at<br />

the end of more than forty-five years<br />

of active service, during which he<br />

gine installation as well as the<br />

conversion of vessels from coal<br />

gained many friendships among both<br />

the employes and patrons of the company<br />

which he has faithfully served.<br />

to oil burning equipment, Todd In the late afternoon of his last day<br />

offers to owners and operators<br />

of active service, shop, factory and<br />

locomotive whistles and bells joined<br />

a complete, painstaking and eco­ in a noisy farewell to "Dash," the<br />

nomical service that is unsur­<br />

name by which he was most familiarly<br />

known.<br />

passed throughout the World. On the evening of March 12, Lake<br />

Shore Lodge of the Switchmen's Union<br />

TODD SHIPYARDS CORPORATION<br />

25 Broadway, New York<br />

held an open meeting which, in addition<br />

to members and families of the<br />

local organization, was attended by<br />

Twelve Shipways—Twenty-two floating docks the president of the union and operat­<br />

Two graving docks<br />

ing officials of the Cleveland Terminal<br />

District and Cleveland Division. At<br />

PLANTS<br />

this meeting Mr. Seabrandt was presented<br />

with a gold-headed cane and<br />

Robins Dry Dock & Repair Co., Erie Basin, Brooklyn, N. Y.<br />

Mrs. Seabrandt with a bouquet of<br />

Tietjen & Lang Dry Dock Co., Hoboken, N. J.<br />

roses.<br />

Todd Dry Dock Engineering & Repair Corp.<br />

Foot oflSrd Street, Brooklyn, N.Y.<br />

On March 17, the esteem and friend­<br />

Todd Oil Burners, Ltd., London, England<br />

ship with which Mr. Seabrandt is re­<br />

Todd Engineering, Dry Dock & Repair Co., New Orleans,La. garded, was further testified to at a<br />

Todd Shipbuilding & Dry Dock Co., Inc., Mobile, Ala. banquet held at Hotel Cleveland, at­<br />

Todd Dry Docks, Inc.<br />

tended by more than 200 friends and<br />

Harbor Island, 16th Ave., S,W., Seattle, Wash. employes representing every department<br />

of the Railroad. W. F. Schaff,<br />

Assistant General Manager, was the<br />

principal speaker at this banquet,<br />

which was presided over by W. H.<br />

The Keystone Railroad Tool Grinder is now in use on all leading <strong>Railway</strong> Systems—<br />

because the machine sustains every claim made for it.<br />

Its Supremacy in. mechanical precision, wearing qualities and dependable service is<br />

acknowledged.<br />

You will save 80% of edged tool expense by installing this machine on every section.<br />

K E Y S T O N E GRINDER & M F G . CO<br />

Patentees and Manufacturers, Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />

109<br />

Sullivan, General Superintendent, as<br />

toastmaster. At this gathering Mr.<br />

Seabrandt was presented with a Masonic<br />

ring set with a diamond, more<br />

than a karat in size, which was the<br />

expression of regard and friendship<br />

of employes of the Cleveland District.<br />

Mrs. Seabrandt was presented with a<br />

. bouquet of American Beauty roses.<br />

Mr. Seabrandt is succeeded as General<br />

Yard Master by E. J. Gibbons,<br />

formerly Chief Supervisor, Car Service.<br />

O w n Y o u r<br />

Home<br />

Home ownership is made<br />

easy through our amortization<br />

plan which pays off<br />

the mortgage in eleven<br />

and one-half years on a<br />

monthly basis like rent.<br />

No bonus or commissions.<br />

Lowest loan expense. Officers<br />

advise freely on planning<br />

and financing.<br />

Write for Booklet "R2"<br />

RAILROAD CO-OPERATIVE<br />

BUILDING & LOAN<br />

ASSOCIATION<br />

441 Lexington Avenue<br />

NEW YORK


110<br />

Albany's Oldest Bank<br />

Successful for 125 Years<br />

N e w Y o r k State<br />

N a t i o n a l B a n k<br />

of Albany, N. Y.<br />

Capital . . . $1,250,000<br />

Surplus and Un­<br />

divided Profits $2,650,000<br />

New York Central Lines Depository<br />

OFFICERS:<br />

LEDYARD COGSWELL, Chairman of Board.<br />

LEDYARD COGSWELL, Jr., President.<br />

PARKER CORNING, Vice-President.<br />

FREDERICK McDONALD, Vice-President.<br />

J. MILTON RUSSUM, Cashier.<br />

EDWARD M. BOICE, Assistant Cashier.<br />

WM. R. BLEECKER, Assistant Cashier.<br />

EDMUND W. CORRIE, Assistant Cashier.<br />

HAROLD C. JOSLIN, Assistant Cashier.<br />

CHESTER C. KENT, Trust Officer.<br />

MARK H. PEET, Assistant Trust Officer.<br />

C O L U M B U S<br />

is a growing city. It is progressive.<br />

Bank deposits of Columbus banks<br />

total over $115,000,000. It will<br />

make a good city for manufacturer,<br />

jobber, merchant and all types of<br />

business enterprises.<br />

For desirable offices in the heart of<br />

Columbus' business activity, apply at<br />

COMMERCIAL NATIONAL BANK<br />

9 East Long Street<br />

TheW. S. Gilkey Printing Company<br />

Continuous<br />

Folded Forms<br />

Tariffs<br />

Railroad Forms and<br />

Blank Books<br />

Betts'<br />

Gilkey-Ogden Patent<br />

Cut-Up System of<br />

Wheel and<br />

Interchange Forms<br />

Cleveland, Ohio<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Worcester<br />

Bank & Trust<br />

Company<br />

WORCESTER, MASS.<br />

Worcester's Largest Commercial Bank<br />

Deposits over $35,000,000<br />

Trust Funds over $18,000,000<br />

A D E P O T F O R D E P O S I T S<br />

The depots on the road to success are<br />

banks and the tickets are deposit slips.<br />

In Youngstown this institution is the<br />

main depot for deposits.<br />

FIRST NATIONAL BANK<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E DOLLAR SAVINGS & TRUST CO.<br />

Resources—Over Forty-Six Millions<br />

YOUNGSTOWN, OHIO<br />

It is the Dimes That You Save<br />

that count—and quickly help<br />

you realize your ambitions.<br />

Not the Dimes You Spend<br />

Dime Savers Free for the asking<br />

Dept. D. S.<br />

The Northern New York Trust Company<br />

WATERTOWN, NEW YORK<br />

E V E R Y T H I N G<br />

FOR <strong>TH</strong>E<br />

O F F I C E<br />

Printing Accounting Systems<br />

Engraving Office Furniture<br />

Lithographing Filing Equipment<br />

Blank Books Loose Leaf Devices<br />

Stationery Surveying Instruments<br />

Drafting and Drawing Supplies<br />

QREGORY^AyER & JHOAfO.<br />

CADILLAC SQUARE DETROIT, MICH.<br />

LANSING — BRANCHES — FLINT<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

33<br />

CONVENIENT<br />

OFFICES IN<br />

HUFFALO<br />

Is t h e r e " A G R E E N F L A G<br />

o n y o u r i n c o m e ?<br />

NO man really is prosperous<br />

until he makes his money,<br />

whether capital or salary,<br />

work for him. He must be sure<br />

that there is "more coming."<br />

The easiest and surest way to<br />

do this is through a bank<br />

account. Every deposit works<br />

for you . . . you take out more<br />

than you put in!<br />

Put out the green flags today—open an account<br />

at the Marine. It will start building the foundation<br />

of your financial independence.<br />

U s e T o u r B r a i n<br />

In spending money you should<br />

use your intelligence. Brain is<br />

just as necessary in helping you<br />

save your money. Think a little<br />

bit and you will find the savings<br />

account to be the most secure<br />

for your savings.<br />

4% Interest Here<br />

"Pointers on Saving" free booklet<br />

Write for it<br />

%<br />

Farmers Deposit National Bank<br />

Savings Department<br />

Fifth Avenue and Wood Street<br />

Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />

M A R I N E<br />

T R U S T C O M P A N Y<br />

OF<br />

B U F F A L O<br />

"RESOURCES<br />

JtiO'RE <strong>TH</strong>AN<br />

20O<br />

^MILLION<br />

The New<br />

Huntington<br />

Bank<br />

Building<br />

29<br />

111<br />

rr fcjK -^r^l<br />

CONSIDER <strong>TH</strong>E ADVANTAGES<br />

of locating your Columbus office in Columbus'<br />

finest general office building. Address<br />

HUNTINGTON BANK BUILDING<br />

Suite311-312 Columbus.Ohio


112<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

G . A . A C K E R M A N N P R I N T I N G C O .<br />

Now Located at<br />

350 Hudson St. W<br />

NEW YORK W<br />

Telephone Walker 3366<br />

Most of the Half-Tones and<br />

Line Engravings in this issue<br />

WERE MADE BY <strong>TH</strong>E<br />

Consolidated Engraving Company<br />

151-155 W. 25th St., N.Y. City . Tel., Watkins 4420-4421<br />

Frederick A. Russell, Pres. J. Warren Russell. V.-Pres. J. Raymond Russell. Sec.<br />

N e w t o w n Creek T o w i n g Co.<br />

HARLEM RIVER TOWBOAT LINE, Inc.<br />

Est. 1880 Est. 1870—Inc. 1918 Inc. 1889<br />

Q T l Jf C Equipped with Powerful Pumps for Fire,<br />

1<br />

° 1<br />

C L A S S I F I E D P R I N T I N G<br />

PAPER MILLS AT CICERO CHICAGO, ILL.<br />

Wrecking Purposes, and Testing Boilers<br />

WE WILL TOW—Any Thing—Any Where—Any Time<br />

Main Office: ONE FRONT ST.. Long Island City, N. Y.<br />

Main Office Phone: Hunters Point 38-40-41 -42-43 Sunday Call: Stags 8492<br />

P A R A M O U N T F U E L C O .<br />

HILLSBORO COAL<br />

From HILLSBORO COAL COMPANY'S MINE<br />

CENTRAL ILLINOIS<br />

307 N. Michigan Ave. Chicago, III.<br />

Interstate Electric Co.<br />

WM. H. CROWLEY, Prop.<br />

Electrical Construction<br />

SPRINGFIELD, MASS.<br />

HARRY LANCASTER WILLIAM McGREW<br />

L. & M. STONE CO.<br />

Producers of<br />

Crushed Lime Stone—Railroad Ballast<br />

Quarry at PROSPECT, N. Y. General Office: UTICA, N. Y.<br />

United Coal Sales Company<br />

GEO. W. SWEENEY<br />

833-834 Majestic Building Detroit, Mich.<br />

V U L C A N IRON P R O D U C T S<br />

BLOOM STAYB0LT IRON i<br />

XX ENGINE BOLT IRON f<br />

IRON FORGING BLOOMS N<br />

BAR AND BAND IRON<br />

727-747 West Van Buren St.<br />

CHICAGO<br />

Telephone Haymarket 7414<br />

Hewitt Rubber Company<br />

Mechanical Rubber Goods for Railroads<br />

Factories, Buffalo, N. Y.<br />

BLAST FURNACE SLAG<br />

Crushed and Screened to Specification<br />

For Railroad Ballast<br />

Concrete • Macadam • Roofing<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E BUFFALO SLAG COMPANY<br />

BUFFALO, N.Y.<br />

WASSON COAL COMPANY<br />

Producers of<br />

Genuine Harrisburg White Ash<br />

Sales Office: FISHER BUILDING, Chicago<br />

WASSON-POCAHONTAS COA( CO.<br />

69th St. & N.Y.C. Tracks—South Side Retail Distributors<br />

D R E S S E L<br />

RAILWAY LAMP & SIGNAL CO.<br />

ARLINGTON, N. J.<br />

Burdett Oxygen & Hydrogen Company<br />

«<br />

Pittsburgh, Pa.<br />

J. L. Q U I M B Y & C O M P A N Y<br />

SOLE MANUFACTURERS<br />

QUEEN BEE L U B R I C A N T<br />

Office: 278 Water St.. New York City<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 192S<br />

"le desire aueje merits"<br />

Open Day and Night<br />

N . Y . C . S t a t i o n<br />

R e s t a u r a n t<br />

Guillaume&Co.,Inc. Utica,N.Y.<br />

J. C. TRITTEN .% Manager<br />

If You Never Tried HYKLAS<br />

You Cannot Know How DIFFERENT It Is<br />

A gingery drink with a mellowness most<br />

uncommon<br />

Why don't you try a glass J<br />

G i n g e r A l e Cleveland<br />

Makes you glad you're thirsty<br />

The<br />

CITY ICE «° FUEL CO.<br />

A L B A N Y D A I R Y C O M P A N Y<br />

Perfectly Pasteurized<br />

Milk and Cream<br />

ALBANY, NEW YORK<br />

'Telephone Connection<br />

Seamen Lichtenstein & Co., Inc.<br />

High Grade<br />

V E G E T A B L E S and F R U I T S<br />

345-347-349 West 14th St. NEW YORK<br />

Telephone, Melrose 2112<br />

C J. B R E I T E N B A C H<br />

Bronx Model Bakery<br />

661 EAST 161st STREET NEW YORK<br />

JAMES GOLDSTEIN LEO LIPPMAN<br />

PHONE, SENECA 1305<br />

GOLDSTEIN & LIPPMAN<br />

COMMISSION MERCHANTS<br />

—WHOLESALE—<br />

Butter, Eggs, Poultry, Fruits and Vegetables<br />

172 MICHIGAN STREET BUFFALO, N.Y.<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E UNION NEWS COMPANY


jiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimnimiiiiiiuiiiiiii<br />

DEARBORN<br />

service is conscientious<br />

and effective.<br />

To succeed is our<br />

obligation to those<br />

who have learned to<br />

depend upon us.<br />

Dearborn Chemical Co.<br />

299 Broadway, New York<br />

310 S. Mich. Ave., Chicago<br />

iiiiiiiiii]I!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii<br />

Nine Piece Drawing Set<br />

Worth $30.00<br />

SPECIAL PRICE<br />

$-^cj.oo<br />

Send no money—pay<br />

the postman<br />

Your money back if you are<br />

not satisfied<br />

Charles Bruning Company, Inc.<br />

102 Reade Street - New York City<br />

TAYLOR'S<br />

Self'Locking — Dust-Proof<br />

JOURNAL BOX and COVER<br />

SPECIAL METAL PEDESTALS<br />

High Grade Heroult Electric<br />

STEEL CASTINGS<br />

Manufactured by<br />

W. P. TAYLOR COMPANY<br />

218 Ellicott Square Buffalo, N. Y.<br />

BOLTS<br />

FORCINGS<br />

LAGS<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Neelii |<br />

NuUBqIiGo.<br />

EST I88lINC.I902<br />

n u t s<br />

RIVETS<br />

2101 Wharton St. S.S. RODS<br />

Pittsburqh,Pa.,U.S.A.<br />

P A I G E - J O N E S<br />

Water Treatment for<br />

Locomotive Boilers<br />

WAYSIDE-TANK ME<strong>TH</strong>OD<br />

(Patented July U, 1926)<br />

Treatment at the Source.<br />

Investment nominal and operating cost less than<br />

softening plants.<br />

PAIGE & JONES CHEMICAL CO., Inc.<br />

461 Fourth Avenue New York<br />

EIGHT WORKS]<br />

RAMAPO-AJAX-ELLIOT<br />

HIIXBURN, NEW YORKaL<br />

NIAGARA FALLS. N.Y<br />

CHICAGO, ILLINOIS<br />

EAST ST.LOUIS. ILL.<br />

PUEBLO, COLORADO<br />

SUPERIOR.WISCONSIN<br />

LOS ANGELES. C A L<br />

NIAGARA FALLS. ONT..<br />

Jf R A I L W A Y T R A C K M A T E R I A L<br />

Wi^/ S w i t c h Stands, Fiogs.<br />

J! «3T Switches, Crossings.<br />

•'//mj Guard Rails. Clamps. Sc.<br />

f°r steam, mine and<br />

i S ^ - p industrial railway tracks<br />

_ i * M A N G A N E S E W O R K A SPECIALTY<br />

n n S f e SALES OFFICES AT ALL WORKS<br />

7== ijijiigni>^==' ju ai„ Office, H I I X B U R N , N . Y<br />

YOUNGSTOWN<br />

ALL STEEL CORRUGATED FREIGHT CAR DOORS<br />

CAMEL<br />

FREIGHT CAR DOOR FIXTURES<br />

Weather and Burglar Proof @> Top or Bottom Supported<br />

Camel Sales Company<br />

332 South Michigan Avenue CHICAQO, ILLINOIS<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

DICKSON & EDDY<br />

WHITEHALL BUILDING, 17 Battery Place, New York<br />

AN<strong>TH</strong>RACITE g^£\^ A • BITUMINOUS<br />

Scranton Coal Co.<br />

West End Coal Co.<br />

Price-Pancoast Coal Co<br />

Indiana and Illinois Coal<br />

Corporation<br />

1425 Old Colony Building<br />

CHICAGO<br />

Daily Capacity, 20,000 Tons<br />

4 Mines in Indiana 5 Mines in Illinois<br />

Located on the Big Four and C. & E. I. Railroads<br />

E. L. FURBER & COMPANY<br />

HIGH GRADE<br />

Bituminous Coals<br />

50 CONGRESS ST. BOSTON, MASS.<br />

COLEMAN & CO., Inc.<br />

N a y<br />

PHI VFR y Standard<br />

VVJL. V JLIY Bituminous Coal<br />

Mine Capacity—One Million Tons Annually<br />

Bankers Trust Building 25 BROADWAY<br />

PHILADELPHIA NEW YORK<br />

CUAL<br />

New England Office, go Congress Street, Boston, Mass.<br />

High Grade Steam and<br />

Gas Coals for all<br />

purposes<br />

New England Coal & Coke Company<br />

MINERS AND SHIPPERS<br />

STEAM and GAS COALS<br />

From the New River, Pocahontas,<br />

Pennsylvania and Fairmont Fields<br />

Sales Agent<br />

New England Fuel & Transportation Company<br />

Mines: Federal No. 1, Grant Town, West Va., on Baltim.re&Ohio<br />

R<br />

- R-—Capacity, 3,000 tons daily. Federal No. 3, Lowsville,<br />

West Va., on Monongahela R. R.—Capacity, 2,000 tons daily.<br />

GENERAL OFFICES:<br />

250 Stuart Street, Boston, Mass.<br />

Providence, R. I. BRANCH OFFICES Norfolk Va<br />

Pittsburgh, Pa. New York. N. Y. Baltimore." Md.<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E<br />

Youghiogheny & Ohio Coal Co.<br />

1230 Hanna Bldg. Cleveland, Ohio<br />

Miners and Shippers of<br />

COAL<br />

Youghiogheny Gas.<br />

Westmoreland Gas<br />

Pittsburgh Steam<br />

Pittsburgh No. 8<br />

Bergholtz-Amsterdam<br />

The Enos Coal Mining Co.<br />

(general Office—308 Euclid Ave. Bldg.<br />

Cleveland, O.<br />

Indianapolis Office—'Merchants Bank Bldg.<br />

DAILY CAPACITY—4000 Tons<br />

Latest Modern Equipment<br />

Operation . . Oakland City, Ind.<br />

Located on Big Four & <strong>Southern</strong> <strong>Railway</strong>s<br />

115


116<br />

The Philadelphia & Cleveland<br />

Coal Company<br />

Reakirt Bldg. Cincinnati, Ohio<br />

BRANCHES<br />

C. R. P. & L. Building - Columbus, Ohio<br />

Riley Law Building - - - Wheeling, W. Va.<br />

Producers and Shippers of<br />

OHIO, WEST VIRGINIA, PENNA.,<br />

KENTUCKY STEAM AND<br />

DOMESTIC COALS<br />

BITUMINOUS<br />

VICTOR<br />

COAL<br />

U.^PATCNTOfn<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

2nd Nai. Bank<br />

Bide.<br />

Toledo, O.<br />

<strong>Canada</strong> Coal<br />

Ltd., Toronto,<br />

Ont., Can.<br />

No. 1 Broadway<br />

New York City<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E PURSGLOVE COAL<br />

N.Y. C. Lines<br />

Penn. R. R.<br />

MINING COMPANY<br />

General Office<br />

Union Trust Building<br />

Cleveland, Ohio<br />

u r !<br />

MINEs|P<br />

« l o v e<br />

^ W<br />

/ Bannock, Ohio<br />

/ V a<br />

-<br />

B. & O. R. R.<br />

Monongahela R. R.<br />

The Marcy-Buck Co., Inc.<br />

AN<strong>TH</strong>RACITE AND<br />

BITUMINOUS COAL<br />

Builders' Supplies<br />

WATERTOWN, N. Y.<br />

Rochester and Pittsburgh Coal Company<br />

Miners and Shippers of Celebrated<br />

REYNOLDSVILLE BITUMINOUS COAL<br />

A Superior Steam Coal for All Steam Producing Purposes.<br />

Excellent for R. R. and Steamship Use<br />

New York, N. Y.<br />

J. N. Terrio, Sales Agent<br />

C. R. Mabley, Jr., Sales Eng V<br />

Philadelphia, Pa.<br />

F. E. Clark, Sales Agent<br />

H. B. Yorgy, Special Agent<br />

General Sales Department<br />

420 LEXINGTON AVE., NEW YORK<br />

1. NOBLE SNIDER, Vice-President<br />

Cowansh&nnock Coal & Coke Co.<br />

Pittsburgh Gas Coal Co.<br />

Sales Agents for/ r\ Brush Brusn Creek v,rce» Coal v-uni i»» Mining Co.<br />

j Coal Run Mining Co.<br />

( Tide Coal Mining Co. Cc<br />

Buffalo. N. Y.<br />

C. Braun, Jr., Sales Agent<br />

Rochester, N. Y.<br />

E. E. Morse, Sales Agent<br />

C.K.Crofton, Sales Eng'r<br />

Albany, N. Y.<br />

W. D.Scofield. Sales Agent<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 117<br />

MINER<br />

FRICTION DRAFT GEARS « IDEAL SAFETY HAND BRAKES<br />

SAFETY BOLSTER LOCKING CENTER PINS<br />

REFRIGERATOR CAR DOOR FASTENERS « SIDE BEARINGS<br />

W. H. MINER, INC.<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E ROOKERY CHICAGO<br />

BOLTS, NUTS and WASHERS<br />

Carriage<br />

and Automobile Forgings<br />

The Columbus Bolt Works Co.<br />

COLUMBUS, OHIO<br />

New York<br />

Car Wheel Company<br />

MANUFACTURERS OF<br />

Chilled Tread Wheels<br />

BUFFALO, N. Y.<br />

"NYCO" Special Wheels<br />

Every Ton is carefully<br />

inspected before<br />

shipment/<br />

ST. <strong>TH</strong>OMAS Brass<br />

rr ing<br />

parts tor<br />

BRONZE LOCOMOTIVES<br />

C O M P A N Y JOURNAL<br />

^ KJ1V1 r J\ IN I BEARINGS<br />

L I M I T E D BABBITTS<br />

Miscellaneous<br />

brass castings<br />

Works and Office: for<br />

St. Thomas, Ontario RAILROADS<br />

G O U L D<br />

Side Frames * Bolsters * Couplers<br />

Open Hearth Steel Castings<br />

The Gould Coupler Co.<br />

New York Works: Depew Chicago<br />

Pittsburgh Coal Comp<br />

pitthurgh, penna.


118<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

G R A H A M BOLT & NUT COMPANY<br />

<strong>TH</strong>EY LOCK ON EVERY <strong>TH</strong>READ<br />

UNIT NUTS<br />

P I T T S B U R G H P E N N S Y L V A N I A<br />

S C U L L I N S T E E L C O .<br />

MAKERS of CAST STEEL<br />

BOLSTERS-SIDE FRAMES—STEEL<br />

CASTINGS-BARS and SHAPES<br />

2050 Grand Central Terminal<br />

NEW YORK<br />

n. A. HEGEMAN. Jr., Preiident H. A. HEOEMAN. lit Vice-Pica, and Treat.<br />

J. M. PRATT. Vice-Pres. in charge of Salei F. T. SARGENT, Secretary<br />

National <strong>Railway</strong> Appliance Co.<br />

Graybar Building, 420 Lniaglon Am.. New York City. N. T.<br />

BRANCH OFFICES:<br />

Munsey Bldg.. Washington. D. C. 100 Boylaton St.. Boston. Man.<br />

Hegeman-Caatle Corporation. <strong>Railway</strong> Exchange Building. Chicago, lil.<br />

RAILWAY SUPPLIES<br />

Garland Ventilators<br />

Feasible Drop Brake Statin<br />

Flaxlinum Insulation<br />

Anglo-American Varnish Co., Varnishes.<br />

Enamels, etc.<br />

Walter Tractor Snow Plows<br />

Port Pitt Spring & Mfg. Co.'i Springs<br />

Economy Electric Devices Co.'a<br />

National Hand Holds<br />

National Safety Devices Company's<br />

Power Saving and Inspection Meters<br />

Dunham Hopper Door Devices<br />

Genesco Paint Oils<br />

Tool Steel Gears and Pinions<br />

Whistle Blowers, Gong Ringers and<br />

Brake Hangers<br />

Godward Gas Generators<br />

Bell Register Pare Boxes<br />

'Cowdrey Automotive Brake Testing Machine"<br />

ACME QUALITY<br />

Paint-Varnish -Lacquer<br />

A Finish for<br />

Every Surface<br />

Acme White Lead and Color Works<br />

DETROIT, MICH.<br />

G o u l d B a t t e r y<br />

U n f a l t e r i n g for<br />

R a i l w a y Signal Systems<br />

and Train Lighting<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E GOULD STORAGE BATTERY CO., Inc.<br />

250 Park Ave., New York<br />

Keep Your Cars in Service<br />

By Using Buckeye Integral Box Truck Frames<br />

The Buckeye Steel Castings Co.<br />

COLUMBUS, OHIO<br />

New York - Chicago - St. Paul - Louisville - London<br />

Tuco Flexolith Plastic Flooring Material<br />

Tuco National Treated Duck Roofing Material<br />

Tuco Resisto Hair Felt Car Insulation<br />

Tucork Mineral Car Insulation<br />

Tuco National Steel Trap Doors<br />

Tuco Universal Steel Trap Doors<br />

Tuco Window and Door Screens—Imperial and Universal type<br />

Tuco Deck Sash Ratchets—Eclipse type<br />

Tuco Sash Balances—Perfection and Reliance type<br />

Tuco Preservative for Steel Floor Plates<br />

TUCO PRODUCTS CORPORATION<br />

30 Church Street, New York, N.Y.<br />

Branch Offices<br />

Chicago, 111., Washington, D. C, San Francisco, Cal.<br />

Montreal, Quebec<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

^ ^ J a U ^ j<br />

BUSHINGS<br />

T H E 0 . A . C R A N E ' S S O N S C O M P A N Y<br />

Brooklyn Floating Docks and Shipyard<br />

MACHINE, BOILER & BLACKSMI<strong>TH</strong> SHOP<br />

f Dock No. 1, 2500 Tons, Take 280 Ft. Vessel<br />

CAPACITY OP DOCKS: { Dock No. 2, SS00<br />

[ Dock No. 3, 1100 "<br />

Brooklyn Office<br />

Erie Basin, Breakwater, Brooklyn, N.Y.<br />

Tel. 3000 Hamilton<br />

Branches:<br />

Chicago Kansas City<br />

San Francisco<br />

Freight Service<br />

requires millions of wellmade,<br />

dependable bushings<br />

and bearings for the<br />

job of delivering its payloads<br />

with least delay and<br />

at the least expense. In<br />

supplyingthisneed Johnson<br />

Bronze is a specialist.<br />

Johnson Bronze Co.<br />

New Castle, Pa.<br />

J O H N S O N / f B R O N Z E<br />

B U S H I N G S 66ARU BAR BRONZE<br />

T h e Q & C C o m p a n y<br />

90 WEST STREET<br />

NEW YORK<br />

PEOPLES GAS BUILDING<br />

CHICAGO<br />

RAILWAY EXCHANGE BLDG., ST. LOUIS<br />

-i,i


120 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Stapl Castinos<br />

Q a i l r o a J s<br />

Duquesne Steel Foundry Co.<br />

PiTTfiBURftH.PCNWA.<br />

K f A T H A M<br />

Mechanical Lubricator<br />

Made in 8, 16 and 20 pint capacities.<br />

Two to eight feeds.<br />

Provides proper lubrication for<br />

long, continuous runs.<br />

Eliminates the need of refilling<br />

on the road.<br />

Insures uniform lubrication<br />

throughout -the run regardless of<br />

the length of the run or the severity<br />

of the service.<br />

Solves the lubrication problem<br />

for every steam cylinder on the<br />

locomotive.<br />

NA<strong>TH</strong>AN MANUFACTURING CO.<br />

250 Park Ave., New York<br />

FARLOW DRAFT ATTACHMENTS<br />

Security Plus<br />

FARLOW Draft Attachments<br />

securely harness the draft gear<br />

and coupler to the underframe.<br />

In addition to this they protect<br />

the underframe as well as the entire<br />

draft rigging against concentrated<br />

destructive shocks.<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E SYMINGTON COMPANY<br />

New York Chicago Baltimore<br />

Boston Montreal<br />

WORKS : ROCHESTER. N. Y.<br />

LOCK NUTS HOLDING NUTS<br />

"DS"<br />

SQUARE OR HEXAGON<br />

"Finger Fit" U.S. Std. Thread<br />

Standard Safety Nut(orporation<br />

30 Church St. New York, N. Y.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

DESIGNERS A N D BUILDERS OF<br />

R A I L W A Y C A R S O F A L L T Y P E S<br />

Complete Facilities for Repairing and Rebuilding Cars<br />

I A M T . McKEES ROCKS, PITTSBURGH (NOR<strong>TH</strong> SIDE) AND KOPPEL, PA., AND<br />

P I_i/\1N 1 . HEGEWISCH, CHICAGO, ILL.<br />

P R E S S E D S T E E L C A R C O .<br />

New York Pittsburgh Chicago St. Louis St. Paul<br />

M a l l e a b l e I r o n<br />

C a s t i n g s<br />

RAILROAD CAR CASTINGS<br />

A SPECIALTY<br />

This Trade Mark<br />

Signifies<br />

Quality—Service—Satisfaction<br />

Make Your Equipment Safe and Reliable<br />

By Using a Dependable Product<br />

Fort Pitt Malleable Iron Company<br />

PITTSBURGH, PA.<br />

the<br />

Spiral<br />

Stripe<br />

protects you against<br />

mistakes and substi*"' :<br />

-"<br />

121<br />

O N T I M E all the time!<br />

How many million engine miles per pipe<br />

failure does your road average? We know<br />

of many roads which, due to the use of<br />

genuine wrought iron pipe, are regularly<br />

getting as much as eighteen to twenty million<br />

miles without train delay resulting<br />

from pipe failures.<br />

Railroad men who have investigated the<br />

causes of pipe failures are coming to a better<br />

appreciation of the advantages of Byers<br />

Pipe for railroad service.<br />

Byers Pipe is playing an ever more important<br />

part in helping railroad men keep<br />

trains moving with scheduled precision.<br />

A. M. BYERS CO.<br />

Established 1864 PITTSBURGH, PA.<br />

B Y E R S P I P E<br />

GENUINE WROUGHT IRON


122 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

D E T R O I T S E A M L E S S S T E E L T U B E S C O M P A N Y<br />

MANUFACTURERS<br />

Cold Drawn & Hot Rolled Boiler Locomotive & Mechanical Tubing<br />

General Offices and Work.s: Detroit, Michigan<br />

Sales Offices: Chicago Cleveland Cincinnati New York<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> Supplies and Equipment<br />

Machine and Sheet Metal Work, Machinery,<br />

Grey Iron and Brass Castings, Patterns,<br />

Forgings, Armature and Field Coils.<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E COLUMBIA MACHINE WORKS & M. I. CO.<br />

271 Chestnut St., cor. Atlantic Ave.. Brooklyn, N. Y.<br />

It Costs Less to Prevent Rust Tban to Endure It<br />

ARISTOS "COPPERWEUT w, R E<br />

DOES NOT RUST<br />

MAIN OfnCE & MILLS - GlASSPORT PfNKA<br />

Railroad Accessories Corp., New York<br />

Swan-Finch Oil Corporation<br />

NEW YORK<br />

Quality Oils and Greases<br />

James Tregarthen & Sons Co.<br />

INCORPORATED<br />

EAST RIVER D R Y DOCKS<br />

Shipwrights, Caulkers and Spar Makers<br />

Foot 6th, 7th and 8th Streets East River, N. Y.<br />

E. C. BREWER. President H. F. BREWER. Treasurer<br />

BREWER DRY DOCK COMPANY<br />

(Established 1899)<br />

GENERAL REPAIRING<br />

Designers and Builders of Tugs, Barges, Scows and Dry Docks<br />

MARINER'S HARBOR STATEN ISLAND, N.Y.<br />

D I C K I N S O N • DEVICES<br />

Cast Iron Smoke Jacks for Engine Houses.<br />

Light Fireproof Jacks for Engine Houses.<br />

Aeolus Roof Ventilators made of Cast Iron and Sheet Metal.<br />

Cast Iron Chimneys for Small Buildings.<br />

Cast Iron Exhaust Heads. Cast Iron Smoke Plates.<br />

PAUL DICKINSON, Inc., 3356 S. Artesian Avenue, Chicago<br />

P A T E N T S<br />

BOOKLET FREE HIGHEST REFERENCES<br />

PROMPTNESS ASSURED BEST RESULTS<br />

Send drawing or model for examination and advice<br />

WATSON E. COLEMAN, PATENT LAWYER<br />

724 NIN<strong>TH</strong> STREET, N. W. WASHINGTON, D. C.<br />

Trap Rock Ballast<br />

Broken Stone in Concrete sizes<br />

JOHN S. LANE & SON, Incorporated<br />

Quarries on N. Y. C. Lines<br />

Westfield, Mass.<br />

General Office<br />

MERIDEN, CONN.<br />

TRELFALL and McLAUGHLIN<br />

General Contracting Co.<br />

402 Citizens Savings Bank PITTSBURGH, PA.<br />

Poles, Timbers<br />

Cross Ties<br />

Lowi-u Process<br />

Creosoted Wood<br />

Piling, Lumber<br />

Paving Block<br />

AMERICAN CREOSOTING CO., Incorporated<br />

Federal Creosoting Co., Incorporated<br />

LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY<br />

PREPARED O T A FOR<br />

BLAST V A 1 -r RAILWAY<br />

FURNACE W X-r X V V-» BALLAST<br />

Concrete, Roofing and Macadam Pavement<br />

SHIPMENTS ANYTIME—ANYWHERE<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E STANDARD SLAG CO. Y ^ t ^ 0 L ,<br />

Established 1858<br />

B * J o h n s o n & S o n<br />

R A I L R O A D CROSS TIES<br />

RICHMOND, IND.<br />

Timber and Mills in Missouri and Arkansas<br />

O U N E R C A R C L O S E T S<br />

Enameled Iron Wet or Dry Closets<br />

D U N E R C O .<br />

101 S.,-CLINTON STREET. CHICAGO<br />

ESTABLISHED 1895 TEL. BOWUNG GREEN 8933<br />

J. A. RENNOLDS & BRO.<br />

YELLOW PINE PILING<br />

New York Office: 116 BROAD STREET<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

B U F F A L O B R A K E B E A M C O M P A N Y<br />

B R A K E B E A M S FOR A L L C L A S S E S OF EQUIPMENT<br />

M B Brake Pin , v D-<br />

Brake Pins<br />

(Self Locking)<br />

Brake Hanger Pins<br />

(Self Locking)<br />

NEW YORK<br />

Concrete Bridge and<br />

Pile Driving<br />

Trestle Work<br />

Tunnel Lining<br />

Railroad Construction<br />

D. W . Thurston Company<br />

General Contracting<br />

DETROIT MICHIGAN<br />

Locomotives<br />

Box Cars<br />

Gondolas<br />

Flat Cars<br />

Coaches<br />

Cranes<br />

Steam Shovels<br />

Draglines<br />

Dump Cars<br />

Boilers<br />

GENERAL EQUIPMENT CO.<br />

INCORPORATED<br />

342 Madison Avenue New York City<br />

F. F E R G U S O N & S O N<br />

FOX HILL FOUNDRY<br />

Founders — Machinists—Pattern Makers<br />

Propeller W h e e l s<br />

Iron and Bronze<br />

All sizes of tugboat wheels carried in stock<br />

Marine castings of all descriptions<br />

Twelfth and Ginton Sts., Hoboken, N. J.<br />

TELEPHONES HOBOKEN. 88 and 759<br />

Knuckle Pins<br />

(Self Locking)<br />

Brake Shoe Keys<br />

(Self Locking)<br />

DR.TS FOR BRAKE BEAMS<br />

BUFFALO<br />

J. E. FITZGERALD<br />

PRESIDENT<br />

W. E. LOVELACE<br />

GEN. MANAGER<br />

J. E. FITZGERALD<br />

TREASURER<br />

W. H. BOWKER<br />

SECRETARY<br />

AND ASST. TREASURER<br />

The New England<br />

Construction Company<br />

<strong>Railway</strong> and<br />

General Contractors<br />

SPRINGFIELD, MASS. NEW LONDON, CONN.<br />

O'Brien Brothers, Inc.<br />

Contractors<br />

O'Brien Brothers Towing Co., Inc.<br />

O'Brien Brothers Shipyard Corp.<br />

O'Brien Brothers Sand and Gravel Corp.<br />

233 Broadway<br />

123<br />

New York City<br />

The Franklin <strong>Railway</strong> Oil Company<br />

FRANKLIN, PENNSYLVANIA<br />

Manufacturers of the HIQHEST QRADES of<br />

RAILWAY LUBRICATING OILS<br />

GREASES and SIGNAL OILS<br />

Franklin Superheat Valve Oil Franklin Valve Oil<br />

Franklin Coach Oil Franklin Engine Oil<br />

Franklin Car Oil Franklin Signal Oil<br />

Franklin Driving Journal Compound<br />

Franklin Rod Cup Grease Franklin Plastic-Huboil<br />

Franklin Center Plate Grease<br />

Franklin Hot Box Compound


124 New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928<br />

Magnus Company<br />

INCORPORATED<br />

JOURNAL BEARINGS AND<br />

BRASS AND BRONZE<br />

ENGINE CASTINGS<br />

NEW YORK. CHICAGO<br />

WM. M. BALLARD, Inc.<br />

General Contractors<br />

SYRACUSE, N. Y.<br />

The Ellington Miller Co.<br />

General Contractors<br />

Railroad Buildings<br />

a Specialty<br />

417 So. Dearborn St>. Chicago<br />

NASHVILLE TIE COMPANY<br />

NASHVILLE, TENN.<br />

Sales Office and Storage Yard<br />

TERRE HAUTE, IND.<br />

Treated cross ties and switch<br />

ties ready for quick shipment.<br />

We make a specialty of small<br />

lots for industrial tracks.<br />

John Thatcher 8C Son<br />

General Contractors<br />

60 Park Avenue<br />

Brooklyn, N.Y.<br />

Dominion Construction<br />

Company<br />

(Incorporated)<br />

Head Office<br />

NILES, MICHIGAN<br />

D.B. r rampton & Company<br />

HARDWOOD LUMBER<br />

Railroad, Mine and Industrial Lumber<br />

KEENAN BUILDING<br />

PITTSBURGH, PA.<br />

New York Central Lines Magazine for May, 1928 125<br />

WALSH CONSTRUCTION<br />

COMPANY<br />

GENERAL<br />

CONTRACTORS<br />

r<br />

DAVENPORT IOWA<br />

EDWARD JOY CO.<br />

Established 1875<br />

Piping Contractors<br />

Heating Contractors<br />

Electrical Contractors<br />

Plumbing Contractors<br />

Jobbers<br />

Estimates Cheerfully Given<br />

Warehouse and Showrooms<br />

125-133 Market St. 301-315 E. Washington St.<br />

SYRACUSE, N. Y.<br />

Brown Car Wheel Works<br />

Incorporated<br />

Manufacturers of<br />

CHILLED CAST IRON WHEELS<br />

Buffalo, N. Y.<br />

National Carbide<br />

Lantern<br />

Greater<br />

Candle Power<br />

Stronger<br />

and better<br />

diffused<br />

light<br />

Sturdy<br />

Construction<br />

Supplied with or without rear light<br />

Burns<br />

eight hours<br />

on<br />

eight ounces<br />

of Carbide<br />

with only<br />

one filling of<br />

water<br />

For Car Inspection, Maintenance of Way<br />

and Signal Departments. Adaptable for<br />

motor car or hand use.<br />

NATIONAL Carbide—in the RED Drum<br />

—best and most economical for all lighting<br />

and welding purposes.<br />

NATIONAL CARBIDE SALES CORPORATION<br />

342 Madison Avenue, New York, N.Y.


126 New York Central Lines Magazine for May,<br />

STAYBOLTS FOR ANY<br />

BOILER REQUIREMENT<br />

F. B. C. WELDED<br />

and<br />

TATE <strong>TH</strong>READED<br />

FLEXIBLE ASSEMBLAGES<br />

&><br />

TELL-TALE BOLTS<br />

a><br />

CROWN STAYS<br />

RIGID BOLTS<br />

(STRAIGHT OR REDUCED BODY)<br />

Flannery Bolt Company<br />

FLANNERY BLDG. PITTSBURGH, PA.<br />

ALBANY<br />

CAR WHEEL<br />

COMPANY<br />

Manufacturers of<br />

Chilled Car Wheels<br />

and Castings<br />

" E M P I R E S P E C I A L "<br />

Wheels for Electric<br />

and<br />

Heavy Duty Service<br />

ALBANY NEW YORK<br />

The Oxweld<br />

Railroad Service Co.<br />

"Representing<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E LINDE AIR PRODUCTS CO.<br />

(Linde Oxygen)<br />

oo<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E PREST-O-LITE CO., Inc.<br />

(Prest-O-Lite Acetylene)<br />

H<br />

UNION CARBIDE SALES CO.<br />

(Union Carbide and Car Inspectors' Lamps)<br />

WW<br />

OXWELD ACETYLENE CO.<br />

(Oxweld Apparatus and Supplies and Carbic Lights)<br />

WW<br />

HAYNES STELLITE CO.<br />

(High Abrasive Welding Rod)<br />

oo<br />

UNITS OF UNION CARBIDE AND CARBON CORPORATION<br />

30 EAST 42nd STREET, NEW YORK<br />

RAILWAY EXCHANGE BLDG., CHICAGO<br />

The New York<br />

Air Brake Company<br />

Manufactures the<br />

STANDARD<br />

AIR-BRAKE<br />

EQUIPMENT<br />

And Furnishes All Types Required<br />

for Railroad Service<br />

GENERAL OFFICES<br />

420 Lexington Ave. - New York City<br />

WORKS<br />

Watertown, New York<br />

• .«/»nnectors Safety First Switches<br />

Portable Hand Lamps<br />

I .ocomotive and Shop Wiring<br />

Fittings and Fixtures<br />

ft< P Y L E - N A T I O N A L C O M P A N Y<br />

1334-1358 North Kostner Ave.<br />

CHICAGO, ILL., U.S.A.<br />

. .iniidlan Agents: The Holden Company, Ltd.<br />

Montreal, Winnipeg, Vancouver, Toronto<br />

I . .1 Department: International <strong>Railway</strong> Supply Co.<br />

30 Church Street, New York City<br />

Hi Grand Central Terminal, New York City<br />

III Huilders' Exchange Bldg., St. Paul, Minn.<br />

HIS Boatmen's Bunk Bldg., St. Louis, Mo.<br />

CLEVELAND, OHIO<br />

WEST SHORE ORE DOCK<br />

BUFFALO, N. Y.<br />

3—5 ton Brown Electric Unload­<br />

ers—7,000 ton ore storage space<br />

T. & O. C. COAL DOCK<br />

TOLEDO, OHIO<br />

Dumping capacity<br />

40,000 tons of coal daily<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E FAIR<br />

Rail Anti-Creeper<br />

Economical, Simple and Efficient<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E P. & M. CO.<br />

CHICAGO<br />

NEW YORK<br />

127


New York Central Lines Magazine for May<br />

<strong>TH</strong>E RALSTON STEEL CAR COMPANY<br />

COLUMBUS, OHIO<br />

Annual Capacity 7500 New or Rebuilt Freight Cars<br />

ow Many Brake Beam Hangers<br />

Did You Buy Last Year<br />

And how many are you going to buy this year ?<br />

You can reduce replacement costs by standardizing<br />

on SchaeferDrop Forged Brake Beam Hangers.<br />

They are made to last the life of the car.<br />

Schaefer Brake Beam Hangers (and other Schaefer<br />

foundation brake gear details) are drop forged (not<br />

welded) from high carbon, wear-resisting steel.<br />

Every hanger is heat treated and oil quenched.<br />

Because of the additional metal and added strength<br />

at the bend, Schaefer Drop Forged Hangers are<br />

strongest where other hangers are weakest.<br />

We have some interesting data on the service of<br />

Schaefer Drop Forged Brake Beam Hangers on<br />

many prominent roads. Write for complete information<br />

and illustrated bulletins.<br />

SCHAEFER EQUIPMENT CO<br />

General Office : Oliver Building, Pittsburgh, Penn.<br />

Hamilton Railroad<br />

models are now available<br />

fitted with either the fa*<br />

mo us Hamilton 992 movement,<br />

21 jewels, adjusted<br />

to five positions, or the<br />

Hamilton 950 movement,<br />

23 jewels, adjusted to five<br />

positions. Your jeweler<br />

will be glad to show you<br />

any of these models—in<br />

filled white, green or yellow<br />

gold.<br />

E NGINEER<br />

And His Advice Is<br />

"Get a Hamilton,"<br />

F. L. HARRIS, ot the Norfolk and Western <strong>Railway</strong>, is speaking<br />

to Fireman John Gauldin:<br />

"I've carried a Hamilton for twenty-eight years—and my advice is 'get a<br />

Hamilton.<br />

Hamilton, to a railroad man, means considerably more than just a watch. The<br />

name stands for those things which railroad men appreciate and which they insist<br />

upon having—accuracy, dependability and character.<br />

That is why most railroad men choose the Hamilton when selecting a watch<br />

that is to travel up with them toward the spot they have picked as their permanent<br />

berth. They know that no matter how far up the ladder they go in railroad service,<br />

their Hamilton is always prepared to render accurate time service.<br />

This year you will perhaps be thinking of purchasing a new watch. When you<br />

do, ask you jeweler to show you the Hamilton 992 (21 jewels) or the Hamilton<br />

950 (23 jewels). Either of these famous railroad movements is now available in<br />

Hamilton model railroad cases—envelopes of sturdy, rugged beauty to fittingly protect<br />

the "Railroad Timekeeper of America."<br />

We shall be glad to send you a copy of the timebook and a new folder about<br />

Hamilton Railroad models.<br />

HAMILTON WATCH COMPANY<br />

DEPARTMENT 43 LANCASTER, PENNA., U. S. A.<br />

r<br />

The Railroad Timekeeper of America"


When Day is Done<br />

Nothing so rounds out the program, whether<br />

it be a leisurely motor tour, or an exacting<br />

business trip, as a comfortable night's rest<br />

in a modern, fireproof hotel.<br />

All United Hotels are equipped, furnished<br />

and staffed to give the utmost in congenial<br />

accommodations and at rates which add to,<br />

rather than detract from, a sense of well-being.<br />

NEW YORK CITY<br />

PHILADELPHIA, PA.<br />

SEATTLE, WASH.<br />

WORCESTER, MASS.<br />

NEWARK, N. J.<br />

PATERSON, N. J.<br />

TRENTON, N. J.<br />

HARRISBURG, PA.<br />

ALBANY, N. Y.<br />

SYRACUSE, N. Y.<br />

ROCHESTER, N. Y.<br />

u it<br />

NIAGARA FALLS, N. Y.<br />

ERIE, PA.<br />

AKRON, OHIO<br />

FLINT, MICH.<br />

KANSAS CITY, MO.<br />

TUCSON, ARIZ.<br />

In the United States<br />

In <strong>Canada</strong><br />

The Roosevelt<br />

The Benjamin Franklin<br />

The Olympic<br />

The Bancroft<br />

The Robert Treat<br />

The Alexander Hamilton<br />

The Stacy-Trent<br />

The Penn-Harris<br />

The Ten Eyck<br />

The Onondaga<br />

The Rochester<br />

The Seneca<br />

The Niagara<br />

The Laurence<br />

The Portage<br />

The Durant<br />

The President<br />

"El Conquistador<br />

MONTREAL<br />

The Mount Royal<br />

TORONTO<br />

King Edixard Hotel<br />

HAMILTON<br />

Royal Connanght<br />

NIAGARA FALLS<br />

The Clifton<br />

WINDSOR<br />

The Prince Edward<br />

SAINT JOHN, N. B. The Admiral Beatty<br />

* Opens November, 1928.<br />

United Hotels Company of America<br />

Executive Offices: 25 West 45th Street, New York<br />

Affiliated: American Hotels Corporation<br />

Complete information on both domestic and foreign travel<br />

available at all United Hotels<br />

m.<br />

MtLtntrejife

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